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	<title>The Covert Rationing Blog &#187; Search Results  &#187;  cardiology+guidelines</title>
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	<description>Healthcare Rationing in America</description>
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		<title>We Interrupt This Hiatus For A Special Message</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-policy/we-interrupt-this-hiatus-for-a-special-message</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-policy/we-interrupt-this-hiatus-for-a-special-message#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Feb 2012 19:57:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Healthcare Policy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=2151</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As readers can imagine, few things could interrupt my temporary break from blogging &#8211; a break in which I have lost myself in the pleasures of figuring out how best to explain to novice readers the differences between the effective, relative and functional refractory periods of cardiac Purkinje fibers, and a host of other fascinating [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As readers can imagine, few things could interrupt my temporary <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/uncategorized/drrich-is-still-here" target="_blank">break from blogging</a> &#8211; a break in which I have lost myself in the pleasures of figuring out how best to explain to novice readers the differences between the effective, relative and functional refractory periods of cardiac Purkinje fibers, and a host of other fascinating electrophysiologic arcana. With one&#8217;s brain wrapped around delights such as that, blogging fades to a barely remembered romp through some distant dreamscape.</p>
<p>One of the few things that could bring me back from these nether regions to the Covert Rationing Blog, if only for a moment, has happened. The esteemed Dr. Robert Centor, affectionately known as DB in the medical blogosphere, has made a comment on one of my posts, and it is a comment that deserves serious consideration. Further, I find I cannot give his comment appropriate justice by simply answering it with another comment. It requires more.</p>
<p>So, we interrupt this hiatus from blogging in order to give the kind of thoughtful response DB&#8217;s comment deserves.</p>
<p>I have been a reader of DB&#8217;s blog for several years &#8211; substantially longer than the nearly five years I have been writing the CRB. I consider DB to be the voice of internal medicine as it should be practiced. DB is a master of cutting through the fluff to get at the root of what is ailing the practice of medicine today. He has substantially influenced my thinking over the years, and many of DB&#8217;s writings have validated (in my mind, at least) certain of my syntheses of some key problems regarding the present state of medical practice. Indeed, out of sheer respect for DB I have dropped in this post the rather haughty 3rd person approach I traditionally use herein.</p>
<p>At one time I was a relatively frequent commenter on <a href="http://www.medrants.com/" target="_blank">DB&#8217;s blog</a>, and the exchanges that ensued between us have been some of the highlights of my blogging career (such as it is). But two years ago I stopped posting comments on DB&#8217;s Medical Rants, and I stopped making any reference here to DB or his blog. I did so for one simple reason.</p>
<p>It was two years ago that I had my public <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/rebuilding/medical-ethics-smack-down-drrich-vs-the-american-college-of-physician" target="_blank">dust-up with the ACP</a> over the issue of medical ethics. It was a dust-up that drew the notice and disapprobation of some individuals quite well placed within the ACP leadership. Knowing that DB is a member of the ACP&#8217;s Board of Regents, I feared that if I continued acting as if I were one of his &#8220;blogging buddies&#8221; it might reflect poorly on him. The ACP (an organization of which I was a proud member for over 25 years, quitting only when they published their New Medical Ethics in 2002) badly needs voices like DB&#8217;s. Indeed, the fact that they value his voice gives me hope. So, out of respect for him, and in consideration of what I guessed were his best interests, I stopped interacting with DB and his blog altogether, though I have remained a regular reader. I realize that, realistically, what I may do or not do almost certainly has no effect whatsoever on DB&#8217;s relationship with the ACP, but it was something I felt I needed to do.</p>
<p>In any case, that self-imposed avoidance has now been made moot by DB himself.</p>
<p>In his comment DB takes exception to one (or more likely, several) of my recent posts. I will reproduce his entire comment here:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;First, I admit to bias as a member of the ACP Board of Regents.</p>
<p>DrRich (whom I like and admire) has used a technique that we all use. He has established a straw man and beat that straw man into submission.</p>
<p>ACP advocates strongly for high-value, cost-conscious care (HVCCC). In fact a recent Annals article – Appropriate Use of Screening and Diagnostic Tests to Foster High-Value, Cost-Conscious Care – http://www.annals.org/content/156/2/147.abstract – very explicitly attacks low value high cost care.</p>
<p>Advocating for HVCCC does not mean advocating for rationing based on cost alone.</p>
<p>As DrRich always states, we have covert rationing and we believe that rationing has no relation to value.</p>
<p>ACP has challenged all physicians to avoid medications and tests that do not have high value. How is that “herd medicine”?</p>
<p>Please review the recommendations in the recent Annals article and tell us where we have developed recommendations for cost reasons only.</p>
<p>I admire your debating skills, but in my opinion you are not addressing the same question that we are addressing. I speak from clinical experience. I see too many tests ordered that cannot help the patient. I see too many treatments that cost too much without a clear advantage over less expensive treatments.</p>
<p>We should strive for high value care for all our patients. We should eschew low value expensive care for most patients (of course one can construct exceptions to this generalization). Let’s not let hyperbole confuse the issue. We cannot afford unnecessary expenses. We challenge you to define unnecessary. I think you can.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>I believe DB has misunderstood my main argument. This is not his fault. I have been accused more than once of being somewhat obtuse. So let me state it very explicitly:</p>
<p><strong>1)</strong> It has been determined that individualized decision making by doctors and patients is the problem, and to resolve this problem clinical decisions need to be centralized.*<br />
<strong>2)</strong> Obamacare renders much individualized decision making illegal, and establishes formal mechanisms for centralized decision making.<br />
<strong>3)</strong> The ACP&#8217;s New Medical Ethics, whether by intention or not, has allowed agents of the Central Authority to argue that individualized decision making is unethical.<br />
<strong>4)</strong> Centralized decision making will likely yield better results for the collective, better results for the &#8220;average&#8221; patients, but suboptimal results for people on the wrong side of the distribution curve &#8211; and terrible results for people on the tail of the curve. DB himself has written about this tail.</p>
<p>____</p>
<p>* From the book “New Rules,” by Berwick and Brennan:</p>
<blockquote><p>“Today, this isolated relationship [between doctor and patient] is no longer tenable or possible. . . Traditional medical ethics, based on the doctor-patient dyad, must be reformulated to fit the new mold of the delivery of health care. . . The primary function of regulation in health care. . .is to constrain decentralized individualized decision making.”</p></blockquote>
<p>____</p>
<p>There is nothing in my argument that says physicians should avoid attempting to practice high-value medicine. Obviously, they should. There is nothing in this argument that says it is wrong or counterproductive for the ACP (or other professional organizations) to devise publications, guidelines, opinions, or any other kind of aid to assist doctors in making appropriate clinical decisions that will minimize waste for society and harm to their patients. Doing these things is good for the healthcare system and for mankind.</p>
<p>What is wrong is a system that says that centrally-generated clinical &#8220;guidelines&#8221; must be followed to the letter by all doctors for all patients under all circumstances, and that failing to do so is both illegal and unethical.</p>
<p>The document to which DB refers me &#8211; an attempt by the ACP to assign values to certain clinical services &#8211; is a good one, and I am sure clinicians should find it helpful. I can&#8217;t help but believe that he sent me to this particular document because it explicitly calls out implantable defibrillators (the development of which played a significant role in my professional career) as a high-value medical service. That&#8217;s very nice.</p>
<p>But this fact leads me to use, as an example of what I&#8217;m talking about, the abuse of ICD guidelines by the Central Authority. <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines" target="_blank">A year ago</a> an article appeared in JAMA complaining that 22% of ICD implants did not meet the guidelines. That number (which seems about right to me, if guidelines were being treated as just that) was widely castigated as evidence that doctors were engaging in widespread abuse of this expensive medical device. This was followed, 2 weeks later, by an announcement that <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">the Department of Justice was conducting an investigation</a> of guideline violations by ICD implanters. As a first step in this investigation, the DOJ elicited the cooperation of the Heart Rhythm Society &#8211; the professional organization of electrophysiologists &#8211; and the HRS let out that it was effectively gagged from further comment or action on behalf of its members for the duration of the investigation.</p>
<p>The specific part of the ICD guidelines that produced the majority of the &#8220;violations&#8221; was not that ICDs were being used in people who did not really need them. Rather, it was that ICDs were being implanted earlier than the Feds preferred for people who, everyone agreed, should have an ICD. That is, implanters were not waiting the full mandated 4 &#8211; 6 weeks after a heart attack, or after heart failure was diagnosed, before implanting ICDs in some of their patients. Two points about this: First, there are clearly individuals who should receive their ICDs within the first month of a heart attack or heart failure diagnosis, despite what the guidelines say. (For instance, if the patient also has an indication for a pacemaker &#8211; not an uncommon thing &#8211; following the guidelines would require first implanting a pacemaker, then, a few weeks later, doing a second invasive procedure to replace it with an ICD). Second, the clinical evidence supporting this 4 &#8211; 6 week waiting period is based on two fundamentally flawed studies, and constituted the weakest part of the clinical evidence regarding ICDs, and while it is now apparently considered settled science if not gospel, it was originally considered highly controversial when the guidelines first appeared.</p>
<p>We don&#8217;t know what the results of the DOJ&#8217;s investigation will be. Perhaps nothing will come of it and no electrophysiologists will go to jail this time.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s what we do know:</p>
<p>- Doctors are expected to follow clinical guidelines to the letter, with every patient, whether it makes sense for an individual or not.<br />
- Doctors who are not following centralized guidelines to the letter are behaving illegally, and the DOJ &#8211; that&#8217;s the DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE people, and not HHS or Medicare &#8211; will investigate, and at least threaten criminal prosecution.<br />
- Doctors who are not following centralized guidelines to the letter are behaving unethically. (Go back and re-read the commentary from the press and from other physicians, especially physicians who strongly support Obamacare&#8217;s centralized decision making, about the ethics of these ICD-guideline-violators.)<br />
- Such legal and ethical intimidation will prevent doctors from &#8220;violating&#8221; guidelines for their individual patients who are a standard deviation or two away from the mean, and who clearly need an exception.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s my argument. The activities of the ACP, vis a vis establishing helpful studies of the relative clinical value of various clinical actions, or even guidelines for clinical practice (if treated as actual guidelines), are to be lauded and not criticized, and I so laud them.</p>
<p>The ACP has not instituted herd medicine, nor advocated it explicitly, to my knowledge. My only criticism of the ACP has to do with their altering the precepts of medical ethics to make it ethically compatible for doctors to go along with herd medicine. The Central Authority on its own volition has taken it the rest of the way &#8211; to where it&#8217;s unethical NOT to go along with heard medicine. This &#8220;adjustment&#8221; of medical ethics is just what the Central Authority needed in order to validate its policy of centralized decision making, and the ACP provided it. The glee on the part of the government&#8217;s agents <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/a-parsimonious-exegesis-of-the-acps-new-ethics-manual" target="_blank">in response to the ACP&#8217;s New Ethics</a> is palpable.</p>
<p>I still find this a sad, sad thing for the profession, and especially for patients. I also find it very sad for the ACP itself which, by producing the kind of helpful resources to which DB has referred us, would continue to be a great force for good &#8211; were it not for this one very basic, very fundamental, very critical, and therefore utterly tragic flaw.</p>
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		<title>Herd Medicine</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-policy/herd-medicine</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-policy/herd-medicine#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2012 13:27:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ethics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Healthcare Policy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=2130</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: Farmer Emanuel has 10,000 head of cattle in his beef herd. He prides himself in staying up to date on all the latest methods, so he knows that adding a certain antibiotic to their feed will reduce the incidence of intestinal infections, and will increase his annual overall yield, measured in pounds of beef, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>Farmer Emanuel has 10,000 head of cattle in his beef herd. He prides himself in staying up to date on all the latest methods, so he knows that adding a certain antibiotic to their feed will reduce the incidence of intestinal infections, and will increase his annual overall yield, measured in pounds of beef, by 7%. Unfortunately, he also knows that roughly one in 200 of his cattle will experience a likely fatal allergic reaction to the antibiotic. It is possible to do a blood test to determine which specific members of the herd are allergic, but the test itself is quite expensive, and the logistics of separating the allergic cattle at feeding time and providing them with their own antibiotic-free feed would be expensive enough to entirely wipe out his savings.</p>
<p>Obviously, the cost-effective solution is for Farmer Emanuel to give antibiotic-treated feed to all his cattle, accepting the losses of a few head as the necessary price for an impressive overall gain in productivity. He would be an ineffective and incompetent rancher indeed if he were to pass up this opportunity to achieve cost-effectiveness.</p>
<p>For the last two posts (<a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/a-parsimonious-exegesis-of-the-acps-new-ethics-manual" target="_blank">here</a> and <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/the-acp-further-elaborates-on-parsimonious-medical-care" target="_blank">here</a>) DrRich has had some fun in deconstructing the Sixth edition of the American College of Physicians&#8217; Ethics Manual, and especially in demonstrating how the ACP leadership has managed to wrap its collective tongue around the axle defending its unfortunate choice of the word “parsimonious” to describe the ideal mind-set of the modern physician. In the present post, DrRich will discuss a somewhat more serious aspect of the document, namely, what this re-statement of medical ethics really means, and why it was produced.</p>
<p>The Sixth Edition of the ACP Ethics Manual elevates the term &#8220;cost-effectiveness&#8221; to an ethical mandate; and furthermore, it locks this often ambiguous term down into its apparently final form, and in so doing formally launches the era of herd medicine.</p>
<p>Until now, efforts at covert healthcare rationing have been aimed mainly at coercing individual physicians to surreptitiously withhold certain medical services at the bedside. Mainly, doctors were to accomplish this withholding of care simply by failing to inform patients of all their medical options, or perhaps more commonly, by painting certain medical options in an unfavorable light (so that, while they were, in fact, offered, they were offered in such a way that the patient would almost certainly turn them down).</p>
<p>What the Central Authority has learned, over the past 15 years, is that this style of covert rationing simply doesn’t work. It still leaves medical decisions up to individual doctors and individual patients, who have apparently continued to act against the best interests of the collective despite all the coercion that has been brought to bear. The end result has been unremittingly bad – healthcare costs have continued to rise at multiples of both the GDP and the general level of inflation. It has become obvious to the Central Authority that, in order to set the matter right, all healthcare decisions will have to be made centrally, from the top down.</p>
<p>Accordingly, during the first decade of the New Millennium we saw a steadily rising emphasis on “guidelines.” Guidelines are not intrinsically a bad thing, and indeed, when properly used can be greatly beneficial to both doctors and patients. But in a relatively gradual process, guidelines came to be spoken of as more than merely guidelines – that is, as more than helpful considerations which doctors ought to take into serious account when deciding what’s best for an individual patient. Instead, guidelines have become directives for definite action.</p>
<p>In 2010, the Obamacare legislation took the concept of “guidelines” a giant step forward, and essentially rendered it a crime for doctors to “violate” guidelines, which are now to be handed down by federally-appointed panels of experts. As if to emphasize this new paradigm, the Department of Justice a year ago <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">began a secretive investigation</a> of an unknown number of electrophysiologists, for alleged violations of guidelines for using implantable defibrillators. We do not know if any criminal charges will be brought (and because the particular aspect of those guidelines which doctors have allegedly violated were based on rather flimsy evidence, perhaps not), but during the past year American electrophysiologists have certainly been intimidated into reducing the number of implantable defibrillators they offer to their patients. (And so, whether any charges come out of this &#8220;investigation&#8221; or not, mission accomplished!)</p>
<p>Dear Reader, how do you suppose some of these electrophysiologists must feel, after failing to offer implantable defibrillators to their patients who they believe have clear-cut indications for the device, knowing that by failing to offer this treatment their patients may very well (and very predictably) suffer sudden death? At least a few doctors, DrRich warrants, are probably feeling very guilty about it.</p>
<p>And here is the real import of the updated Ethics Manual. It aims to assuage the guilty conscience of physicians who follow handed-down guidelines to the letter, even against their better medical judgment, instead of tailoring the application of those guidelines to the benefit of their individual patients (which, DrRich feels compelled to remind his readers, was the original but now archaic intention of &#8220;guidelines.&#8221;) Doctors who had been feeling badly because they were preserving their own skin at the cost of their patients&#8217; can now take heart. They are not behaving selfishly at all, the New Ethics assures them. They are in fact acting for the greater good of the collective – and therefore they are obeying a higher principle of ethics than those outmoded principles mentioned in the Hippocratic Oath.</p>
<p>While herd medicine was made the law of the land by Obamacare, until now it was still technically unethical. The ACP&#8217;s new Ethics Manual repairs that uncomfortable discrepancy, using, of course, what has become the traditional methodology. (That is, when it becomes  difficult or impossible to adhere to ethical precepts, change them.)</p>
<p>For those who missed it, the relevant passage of the new Ethics Manual states that physicians have an ethical obligation to &#8220;practice effective and efficient health care and to use health care resources responsibly. Parsimonious care that utilizes the most efficient means to diagnose a condition and treat a patient respects the need to use resources wisely. . .&#8221;</p>
<p>Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel offers the midrash on this passage, in his editorial which accompanied the publication of the new Ethics Manual. Emanuel rhapsodizes that it is &#8220;truly remarkable&#8221; that an &#8220;authoritative medical body [is] using such words as &#8216;efficient&#8217; and &#8216;parsimonious&#8217; &#8211; and without &#8216;qualifications&#8217; &#8211; to describe the ideal physician&#8217;s practices.&#8221; Dr. Emanuel notes further that to fulfill this new ethical obligation toward efficiency and parsimony, the Ethics Manual specifies that doctors should act based on &#8220;the best available evidence in the biomedical literature, including data on the cost-effectiveness of different clinical approaches.&#8221;</p>
<p>And that, readers, is the key, for it specifies how doctors, in pursuit of the new ethics, are to act. They are to follow the &#8220;best evidence,&#8221; in particular, the best evidence on &#8220;cost-effectiveness.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the past, when doctors were exhorted to practice cost-effectively, the term was used as a general admonition to not be wasteful. But here, in this formal ethics document (as in the Obamacare legislation), it has now become a term of art. &#8220;Cost-effective&#8221; now has a specific meaning. It is cost-effectiveness as determined by &#8220;best evidence,&#8221; and since any body of clinical evidence will inevitably have conflicts, and since doctors cannot be expected (or permitted) to determine for themselves which evidence is best in every clinical situation, Dr. Emanuel is talking about the &#8220;best evidence&#8221; which will be determined by one of his panels of experts.</p>
<p>Therefore, the ACP&#8217;s new Ethics Manual stipulates that it is now an ethical obligation for doctors to follow expert-produced guidelines to the letter.</p>
<p>But in the real world, there is no single &#8220;best&#8221; determination of cost-effectiveness. This is because any determination of cost-effectiveness depends entirely on who is making the assessment. For instance, when DrRich was deciding whether to buy a smoke alarm to protect himself and his family from dying in a fiery inferno, he judged it to be cost-effective to do so. For a mere $20, DrRich was able to protect himself and his family from death or injury, in the unlikely event that a fire should occur in his home. A bargain to be sure, and at least by DrRich&#8217;s lights it was highly cost-effective (if only for the peace of mind it brought him).</p>
<p>But if the purchase of fire alarms was covered under Obamacare (and why should it not be, since fire-related injury is certainly a medical problem, which produces a burden for our healthcare system), then the cost effectiveness calculation would look very different. For while fire alarms indeed save lives, they do so at an exorbitant cost &#8211; likely more than a million dollars per life-year saved. Clearly, from the perspective of the collective, the purchase of fire alarms ought to be made illegal, and owning one a crime.</p>
<p>And the only reason it&#8217;s not a crime is that such Fire Protection Appliances have not (yet) been designated as being subject to the rulings of the US Preventive Services Task Force.</p>
<p>It is axiomatic, therefore, that the assessment of the cost-effectiveness of any product or service will depend on which party of interest is doing the assessment. And often, what might very well be considered cost-effective by an individual might just as well be considered criminally cost-ineffective by the collective.</p>
<p>And so we have the situation, under both Obamacare and now under the new code of medical ethics, in which doctors are obligated to practice medicine cost-effectively, and the kind of cost-effectiveness being referred to is decidedly NOT the kind that applies to individuals. It&#8217;s the kind that applies to the collective.</p>
<p>Those assembling the GOD panels (Government Operatives Deliberating) &#8211; the panels which will determine the most cost-effective way to practice medicine, and which will distribute rules down to American physicians for deciding who gets what, when and how &#8211; tell us that what&#8217;s good for the herd is certainly what&#8217;s good for the individual. Indeed, this is the <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2011/12/30/144485098/should-doctors-be-parsimonious-about-health-care" target="_blank">precise message of Dr. Hood</a>, president of the ACP.</p>
<p>For the majority of Farmer Emanuel&#8217;s beef cattle, this may very well be the case. But for the unfortunate beeves who will turn out to have a fatal allergy to the antibiotic, and who could have been saved with a little extra effort aimed at optimizing the results for every individual, well, not so much. (Progressives like Keynes have been known to justify such results by noting that whatever we do has limited significance for individuals, since, in the end we individuals &#8211; like the beef cattle &#8211; are all dead anyway.)</p>
<p>Until last week American physicians were ethically obligated to optimize their medical care for every individual, as difficult and dangerous as it has become for doctors to do so in recent years.  No doubt some of them will be relieved to know that their ethical obligations now have been formally changed, to comport with the requirements of their masters, and the facts on the ground.</p>
<p>So open wide and say Moo.</p>
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		<slash:comments>15</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/2130/0/herd-medicine.mp3" length="13671862" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:14:14</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

Farmer Emanuel has 10,000 head of cattle in his beef herd. He prides himself in staying up to date on all the latest methods, so he knows that adding a certain antibiotic to their feed will reduce the incidence of intestinal infections, an[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

Farmer Emanuel has 10,000 head of cattle in his beef herd. He prides himself in staying up to date on all the latest methods, so he knows that adding a certain antibiotic to their feed will reduce the incidence of intestinal infections, and will increase his annual overall yield, measured in pounds of beef, by 7%. Unfortunately, he also knows that roughly one in 200 of his cattle will experience a likely fatal allergic reaction to the antibiotic. It is possible to do a blood test to determine which specific members of the herd are allergic, but the test itself is quite expensive, and the logistics of separating the allergic cattle at feeding time and providing them with their own antibiotic-free feed would be expensive enough to entirely wipe out his savings.
Obviously, the cost-effective solution is for Farmer Emanuel to give antibiotic-treated feed to all his cattle, accepting the losses of a few head as the necessary price for an impressive overall gain in productivity. He would be an ineffective and incompetent rancher indeed if he were to pass up this opportunity to achieve cost-effectiveness.
For the last two posts (here and here) DrRich has had some fun in deconstructing the Sixth edition of the American College of Physicians&#8217; Ethics Manual, and especially in demonstrating how the ACP leadership has managed to wrap its collective tongue around the axle defending its unfortunate choice of the word “parsimonious” to describe the ideal mind-set of the modern physician. In the present post, DrRich will discuss a somewhat more serious aspect of the document, namely, what this re-statement of medical ethics really means, and why it was produced.
The Sixth Edition of the ACP Ethics Manual elevates the term &#8220;cost-effectiveness&#8221; to an ethical mandate; and furthermore, it locks this often ambiguous term down into its apparently final form, and in so doing formally launches the era of herd medicine.
Until now, efforts at covert healthcare rationing have been aimed mainly at coercing individual physicians to surreptitiously withhold certain medical services at the bedside. Mainly, doctors were to accomplish this withholding of care simply by failing to inform patients of all their medical options, or perhaps more commonly, by painting certain medical options in an unfavorable light (so that, while they were, in fact, offered, they were offered in such a way that the patient would almost certainly turn them down).
What the Central Authority has learned, over the past 15 years, is that this style of covert rationing simply doesn’t work. It still leaves medical decisions up to individual doctors and individual patients, who have apparently continued to act against the best interests of the collective despite all the coercion that has been brought to bear. The end result has been unremittingly bad – healthcare costs have continued to rise at multiples of both the GDP and the general level of inflation. It has become obvious to the Central Authority that, in order to set the matter right, all healthcare decisions will have to be made centrally, from the top down.
Accordingly, during the first decade of the New Millennium we saw a steadily rising emphasis on “guidelines.” Guidelines are not intrinsically a bad thing, and indeed, when properly used can be greatly beneficial to both doctors and patients. But in a relatively gradual process, guidelines came to be spoken of as more than merely guidelines – that is, as more than helpful considerations which doctors ought to take into serious account when deciding what’s best for an individual patient. Instead, guidelines have become directives for definite action.
In 2010, the Obamacare legislation took the concept of “guidelines” a giant step forward, and essentially rendered it a crime for doctors to “violate” guidelines, which are now to be handed down by federally-appointed panels of experts. As if to emphasize this new paradigm, the Department of Justice [...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>Ethics</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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		<title>Regarding Those Conflicts of Interest On The Government&#8217;s Guideline Panels</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/stifling-medical-progress/regarding-those-conflicts-of-interest-on-the-governments-guideline-panels</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/stifling-medical-progress/regarding-those-conflicts-of-interest-on-the-governments-guideline-panels#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Nov 2011 17:33:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Healthcare Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stifling medical progress]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1969</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: DrRich does not like to pick on the New York Times. No, really. DrRich does not like to pick on the New York Times, because he receives two paychecks each month from the New York Times*. This fact (which has been disclosed on this blog since its inception in 2007) constitutes a clear conflict [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>DrRich does not like to pick on the <em>New York Times</em>.</p>
<p>No, really. DrRich does not like to pick on the <em>New York Times</em>, because he receives two paychecks each month from the <em>New York Times</em>*. This fact (which has been disclosed on this blog since its inception in 2007) constitutes a clear conflict of interest, at least when it comes to writing blog posts which might criticize or satirize or mock articles that appear in that venerable publication, from which he receives a not insubstantial proportion of his livelihood.</p>
<p>____<br />
*DrRich holds two positions at About.com, which is a <em>New York Times</em> Company. He has manged About.com&#8217;s <a href="heartdisease.about.com" target="_blank">Heart Health Center</a> for 11 years, and also serves on About.com&#8217;s Medical Review Board.<br />
____</p>
<p>Yet, regular readers will know that the <em>New York Times</em> has served as a regular source of material for DrRich here at the CRB, and little of what he has written in response to that material has been supportive of it. Indeed, the opposite is true.</p>
<p>DrRich considers it his duty to respond to the <em>New York Times</em> whenever it publishes an article that advances the covert rationing of American healthcare, which (through no fault of his), it does frequently. The <em>New York Times</em> serves as a chief voice of Progressive America, and the Progressive takeover of the healthcare system has become, since this blog was first begun, the chief driver of covert rationing. So, conflicts of interest to the contrary notwithstanding, DrRich submits to his readers that he has acted responsibly and honorably despite his unfortunate financial conflicts.</p>
<p>But still, he does not like to pick on the <em>New York Times</em>.</p>
<p>It is unfortunate for DrRich, then, that for the second time this week he is compelled to do so. And this time, as it happens, the subject matter has to do with conflicts of interest (a subject about which, as he has just disclosed once again, DrRich knows something).</p>
<p>Today, the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/03/health/policy/health-guideline-panels-struggle-with-conflicts-of-interest.html" target="_blank"><em>Times</em> writes</a> that experts are beginning to worry that the GOD Panels (Government Operatives Deliberating) now working to devise the clinical guidelines under which American doctors will be strictly compelled, <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">under penalty of the law</a>, to decide which patients will get what, when and how, are tainted by members who have had ties to (gasp!) industry.</p>
<p>When the GOD Panels were first set up, not very long ago, it was still considered acceptable for some members to have industry ties as long as they fully disclosed those ties, and recused themselves from voting on matters specifically related to their industry work. Having at least some members with industry ties was deemed essentially unavoidable, because it was thought that deep subject-matter expertise would be desirable on these panels. Since most clinical research in America is paid for by industry, it is difficult to have deep expertise without having had at least some contact with industry.</p>
<p>But as the <em>Times</em> indicates, modern medical ethics has now advanced well past this kind of primitive thinking. Nobody with any industry ties has any business being on a panel with such overwhelming authority over the practice of American medicine.</p>
<p>David J. Rothman, president of the Institute on Medicine as a Profession, tells the <em>Times</em>, &#8220;Consciously or not, they may well be making decisions that fit their funders, their payers and not the patient’s best interests. If you want the public to really believe in the guidelines, why not have a committee that is conflict-free?”</p>
<p>And the ubiquitous Dr. Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic (a person DrRich numbers <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/why-theyre-trashing-the-jupiter-trial" target="_blank">among those individuals</a> who, by their public words and deeds, he speculates may be auditioning for the really important GOD Panels) says, &#8220;Recusing, disclosing — the reason it doesn’t work is the process involves give-and-take. Even if you don’t make a formal vote, you can still have a huge influence over what happens in the process.”</p>
<p>And so, while the <em>Times</em> does not come out and say so, it seems as if a purge of the GOD panelists may be already afoot. If not an actual purge, then at least the &#8220;conflicted&#8221; panel members are being sent a clear message, well before they take any final action. And at the very least, Ms. Sebelius is being given the cover she needs to select the people she really wants for the truly important GOD Panels which are being constructed for Obamacare.</p>
<p>All of this is pretty clear, and DrRich has great confidence that his readers can figure it out for themselves.</p>
<p>What DrRich really hopes to accomplish here is to note for posterity the great paradigm shift that has occurred in just the last two or three years, regarding the appropriate relationship between physicians and industry.</p>
<p>Until very recently, the American public, doctors, industry, and medical ethicists thought about that relationship in a certain way, which DrRich will call Theory A:</p>
<p>Theory A:</p>
<p>-  Medical progress is Good, and benefits mankind.<br />
-  Industry is responsible for a high proportion of medical progress.<br />
-  Industry-driven progress requires the active participation of physicians.<br />
-  Therefore, a well-managed cooperation between industry and physicians is beneficial to mankind, and ought to be encouraged.</p>
<p>If you subscribe to Theory A you believe that, because well-managed physician-industry relationships benefit mankind, these relationships are good. So, fundamentally, it’s the management of these relationships which is at issue. These beneficial relationships produce unavoidable conflicts of interest, which we must manage by strictly limiting their extent, and fully disclosing the ones that are left.</p>
<p>So traditionally, the debate about conflicts of interest have been about where to draw the necessary limits.</p>
<p>What today&#8217;s<em> New York Times</em> article points out is that Theory A is no longer operative. The new thinking begins with the proposition that no amount of conflict of interest is acceptable, and ALL physician-industry ties should be prohibited. One of the most prominent advocates of this new thinking is Jerome Kassirer, former editor of the <em>New England Journal of Medicine</em>, who says, “The ideal handling of conflicts of interest is not to have them at all.” For these voices, Theory A simply does not apply. Rather, they subscribe to Theory B:</p>
<p>Theory B:</p>
<p>-    The greed of medical industry creates excessive costs, and produces far more harm to society than good.<br />
-    Physician-industry alliances strengthen industry, and increase the harm.<br />
-    Therefore, crippling these unholy alliances is critical to the interests of society.</p>
<p>Underlying Theory B, of course, is the largely unspoken and unacknowledged, but nonetheless fully-embraced, proposition that medical progress is not Good after all, but is the very thing that is driving up our healthcare costs, and so it must be stifled.</p>
<p>A corollary of Theory B is that not only is the Central Authority the only entity which is strong enough to cripple these unholy alliances between physicians and industry, but it is the duty of the Central Authority to do so.</p>
<p>Proponents of Theory B, noting, not incorrectly, that medical industry is chiefly concerned with profits rather than the public good, conclude (in a manner compatible with Progressive if not classical logic) that therefore industry will always behave in ways that are counter to the interests of society.  While many proponents of Theory B will agree that industry provides at least some benefits, they are convinced that these benefits are far outweighed by the harm they produce to the collective. Therefore, Theory B proposes to stifle, if not cripple, medical industry. And a very useful strategy for achieving this goal is to de-legitimize any practical relationships whatsoever between medical industry and physicians.</p>
<p>Proponents of Theory B rarely say what their real goal is. To come out and say that their goal is to cripple the companies responsible for producing medical progress would not be expedient. So most of them still give lip service to Theory A. One must discern their real motives from their behavior.</p>
<p>Much of that behavior, in practical terms, has to do with controlling the flow of information. Let industry develop whatever it wants (perhaps), but don’t let profit-drunk industry – or its greedy physician spokespersons – instruct doctors and patients on who ought to use industry’s products, or when and how. That kind of information can only be managed by unbiased sources.</p>
<p>This is the very thinking that produces the impetus for GOD Panels in the first place. Only experts who are free of industry ties and who answer only to our beneficent, unbiased, completely objective government can say which products of industry are good and bad, and can manage the flow of information about them. Information coming from anywhere else is to be regarded as being charged with bias and greed, and should be ignored, or even suppressed by whatever means are necessary.</p>
<p>To any reader who believes that our government is or can ever be an unbiased and honest broker, or that government officials (or GOD panelists) can cancel their own human natures when they put on a government name tag, DrRich can only wish upon you the grace of God (the old fashioned one). You&#8217;ll be needing it. To the rest of us, it is obvious that the government is desperately biased when it comes to medical progress in general, and in particular when it comes to establishing &#8220;guidelines&#8221; for the use of expensive drugs and medical devices.</p>
<p>For Theory B to have become the operative paradigm in America, as the <em>New York Times</em> today suggests it has, will assure the Central Authority that it is free to seed its GOD Panels only with members whose bias runs in their direction.</p>
<p>But under Theory B there is no government bias. There is only industry bias. And when we purge the GOD Panels of all industry bias, by definition we will have created perfect objectivity.</p>
<p>And this is why DrRich feels so comfortable continuing to write this blog despite his obvious financial conflict of interest in favor of the <em>Times</em>. For a conflict of interest in the direction of the Progressive agenda is no conflict at all.</p>
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		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1969/0/COI-on-government-panels.mp3" length="12615262" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:13:08</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

DrRich does not like to pick on the New York Times.
No, really. DrRich does not like to pick on the New York Times, because he receives two paychecks each month from the New York Times*. This fact (which has been disclosed on this blog sin[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

DrRich does not like to pick on the New York Times.
No, really. DrRich does not like to pick on the New York Times, because he receives two paychecks each month from the New York Times*. This fact (which has been disclosed on this blog since its inception in 2007) constitutes a clear conflict of interest, at least when it comes to writing blog posts which might criticize or satirize or mock articles that appear in that venerable publication, from which he receives a not insubstantial proportion of his livelihood.
____
*DrRich holds two positions at About.com, which is a New York Times Company. He has manged About.com&#8217;s Heart Health Center for 11 years, and also serves on About.com&#8217;s Medical Review Board.
____
Yet, regular readers will know that the New York Times has served as a regular source of material for DrRich here at the CRB, and little of what he has written in response to that material has been supportive of it. Indeed, the opposite is true.
DrRich considers it his duty to respond to the New York Times whenever it publishes an article that advances the covert rationing of American healthcare, which (through no fault of his), it does frequently. The New York Times serves as a chief voice of Progressive America, and the Progressive takeover of the healthcare system has become, since this blog was first begun, the chief driver of covert rationing. So, conflicts of interest to the contrary notwithstanding, DrRich submits to his readers that he has acted responsibly and honorably despite his unfortunate financial conflicts.
But still, he does not like to pick on the New York Times.
It is unfortunate for DrRich, then, that for the second time this week he is compelled to do so. And this time, as it happens, the subject matter has to do with conflicts of interest (a subject about which, as he has just disclosed once again, DrRich knows something).
Today, the Times writes that experts are beginning to worry that the GOD Panels (Government Operatives Deliberating) now working to devise the clinical guidelines under which American doctors will be strictly compelled, under penalty of the law, to decide which patients will get what, when and how, are tainted by members who have had ties to (gasp!) industry.
When the GOD Panels were first set up, not very long ago, it was still considered acceptable for some members to have industry ties as long as they fully disclosed those ties, and recused themselves from voting on matters specifically related to their industry work. Having at least some members with industry ties was deemed essentially unavoidable, because it was thought that deep subject-matter expertise would be desirable on these panels. Since most clinical research in America is paid for by industry, it is difficult to have deep expertise without having had at least some contact with industry.
But as the Times indicates, modern medical ethics has now advanced well past this kind of primitive thinking. Nobody with any industry ties has any business being on a panel with such overwhelming authority over the practice of American medicine.
David J. Rothman, president of the Institute on Medicine as a Profession, tells the Times, &#8220;Consciously or not, they may well be making decisions that fit their funders, their payers and not the patient’s best interests. If you want the public to really believe in the guidelines, why not have a committee that is conflict-free?”
And the ubiquitous Dr. Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic (a person DrRich numbers among those individuals who, by their public words and deeds, he speculates may be auditioning for the really important GOD Panels) says, &#8220;Recusing, disclosing — the reason it doesn’t work is the process involves give-and-take. Even if you don’t make a formal vote, you can still have a huge influence over what happens in the process.”
And so, while the Times does not come out and say so, it seems as if a purge of the GOD panelists may be already[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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		<title>Attila The Cardiologist</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/attila-the-cardiologist</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/attila-the-cardiologist#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Aug 2011 10:00:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cardiology Topics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Practice of Medicine]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1701</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: Note: DrRich has issued this warning more than once before. It has always gone unheeded. He will now try one more time, with this updated and hopefully more compelling version, not because he actually believes it will do any more good than similar warnings did those other times, but because he is a humanitarian [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p><em>Note: DrRich has issued this warning more than once before. It has always gone unheeded. He will now try one more time, with this updated and hopefully more compelling version, not because he actually believes it will do any more good than similar warnings did those other times, but because he is a humanitarian and time is growing short. American physicians will continue to ignore this warning at their own peril.</em></p>
<p>The history of Western civilization, from prehistoric times until relatively recently (so recently, in fact, that one cannot be absolutely certain the pattern has been broken), has been marked by successive waves of invasions by wild barbarians from the north. (This explains why DrRich will never completely trust the Canadians.)</p>
<p>Every few hundred years, one group of primitives or another &#8211; Scythians, Goths, Vandals, Huns, Avars, Norsemen, Bulgars, Mongols, and others named and unnamed &#8211; would sweep down upon their betters, upon the more civilized, more culturally and intellectually advanced people to the south, and by the expediencies of slaughter, rape and pillage, would take their land, possessions, freedom, and their lives. The advancing barbarian wave would eventually play itself out, and individual members of the untamed horde would simply settle in place, and over a few generations would become civilized themselves &#8211; until the next group of barbarians, in turn, would fall upon them.</p>
<p>It was a cycle as natural as the seasons.</p>
<p>What drove these irresistible barbarian movements? Historians still argue about it. Likely these violent migrations were caused by several different things &#8211; famine, plague, encroachment by even nastier barbarians from even farther north, and climate change (though this latter conjecture is now politically incorrect, since the official and proper view of the earth&#8217;s climate is that it was absolutely stable for millions of years, until Henry Ford and George Bush came along and bent the temperature curve upwards, like a hockey stick).</p>
<p>The reason DrRich brings all this up, of course, is: to warn his medical colleagues about the cardiologists.</p>
<p>Dear reader, the cardiologists are on the move. Their home turf is being encroached upon, their livelihoods gravely threatened, by the biggest, most ruthless, and most irresistible force on earth &#8211; the Feds. And in response they are gathering themselves into a great wave, and they are preparing to overrun the territories of less robust, less terrifying, more civilized (possibly more effete) medical specialists, and make themselves a new home.</p>
<p>Some medical specialists aside from the cardiologists are of course also predatory by nature, but for the most part their territorial incursions are predictable, localized and contained &#8211; the orthopedic surgeons and the neurosurgeons, for instance, will fight over lumbar disc surgery. Not so for the cardiologists.</p>
<p>DrRich is a cardiologist, and he knows that the Board Certification papers wielded by cardiologists do not read: &#8220;Certified in the practice of cardiac medicine,&#8221; but rather, &#8220;Certified in the practice of cardio<em>vascular</em> medicine.&#8221; Cardiologists, in other words, are officially certified not merely in the practice of heart disease, but also in the practice of any and all disorders affecting the blood vessels.</p>
<p>And DrRich urges his unsuspecting medical colleagues to please notice that blood vessels are prominent features of every organ system in the body. Cardiologists therefore recognize no natural limits to their rightful turf; if it is supplied by the vascular system, it is theirs. And if some other kind of specialist has traditionally claimed sovereignty over some particular organ &#8211; say, the liver &#8211; their continued success lies entirely in the fact that the cardiologists have not yet chosen to assert their rightful authority. (As it happens, hepatologists are relatively safe, as most cardiologists think of the liver as a particularly uninteresting organ, which, after all, just sits there doing nothing. Many cardiologists, in fact, persist in getting the liver and the kidneys mixed up.) Still, should it ever become convenient for cardiologists to invade the hepatologists&#8217; space, these relatively intellectual, relatively sedentary specialists don&#8217;t stand a chance.</p>
<p>What all this means is that when the cardiologists are on the move, nobody is safe. And they are on the move.</p>
<p>Hide the women and children!</p>
<p>The cardiology settlements have been restless for years, continually expanding and growing, and spilling out across their borders to encroach on the turf of their nearby neighbors. They long ago began driving the formerly proud and powerful cardiothoracic surgeons into a sad state of underemployment. More recently they have usurped the formerly sovereign territory of <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/od/cardiacriskfactors/a/metsyndturf.htm" target="_blank">diabetes specialists</a>. They are currently laying siege to sleep medicine (pulmonary specialists) and bariatrics (weight loss specialists). All of these incursions can be related, within one or two degrees of freedom, to heart disease. So these are localized disputes.</p>
<p>But in the last year or so, cardiologists have moved from a state of mere restlessness to a state of high alarm. The ruthless Feds (a mysterious tribe arising from a dark, inexplicable cauldron of a place where even the laws of physics, economics, and human nature do not apply) have taken to attacking the cardiologists where they live &#8211; in their home turf of stents and implantable defibrillators. By conducting <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">secret and extensive DOJ investigations</a> as to whether cardiologists are plying their trade according to &#8220;guidelines&#8221; (a form of tribute acknowledging their state of thrall to the Central Authority), and by threatening to jail them or fine them into professional oblivion (to the point where even the ubiquitous threat of malpractice suits has become a relatively trivial concern), the Feds have forced cardiologists to recognize that it is time for them to move on. It is time to seek out new territory.</p>
<p>There is no telling where they will show up next. If any of you non-cardiologists think you are safe, think again.</p>
<p>To illustrate just how unpredictable the Great Cardiology Migration is likely to become, DrRich will review a few of their recent incursions into the territory of some of the least likely of the medical specialists &#8211; the neurologists and the neurosurgeons.</p>
<p>The cardiologists&#8217; encroachment into the field of neurological medicine is not only surprising in itself (for who would have thought that such shoot-from-the-hip, action-addicted specialists would find anything interesting about the brain?), but especially surprising is its scope and its persistence. Cardiologists actually began this process several years ago, under the radar, when they took to blaming imbalances of the autonomic nervous system (i.e., dysautonomia) on mitral valve prolapse. In more recent years, and somewhat more openly, they have attempted to take ownership of migraine headaches.</p>
<p>And now, in recent months, cardiologists have laid claim to the brass ring of the neurological diseases &#8211; Alzheimer’s Disease. If they can wrest this common and expensive disorder away from the neurologists, a disorder which people will pay almost any amount of money to prevent or treat, they can set themselves up for generations.</p>
<p>The typical pattern of behavior employed by the cardiology invaders is easy enough to spot. First, they call attention to an alleged association between some cardiac condition (a condition they will manufacture if necessary), and a neurological disorder. Then, immediately, they will assert that (or at least begin behaving as if) the association proves a cause-and-effect relationship. Finally, since they have demonstrated that the neuro problem is produced by a cardiac condition, it will become necessary to refer patients who have (or might develop) that dreaded neuro problem to cardiologists, who, lo and behold, will have invented a well-paying procedure which they claim will treat it.</p>
<p>The best known example is <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/cs/mvp/a/MVP.htm" target="_blank">mitral valve prolapse (MVP)</a>, a congenital condition in which the mitral valve partially flops open when it should be closed, thus allowing blood to flow backwards (i.e., to regurgitate) across the mitral valve as the heart contracts. (For anyone interested, here’s a brief description of the <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/cs/starthere/a/chambersvalves.htm" target="_blank">heart’s chambers and valves</a>.) Now, significant MVP can be a serious medical problem which requires mitral valve surgery. Fortunately, however, this kind of serious MVP is relatively uncommon.</p>
<p>But happily for cardiologists, echocardiography (a non-invasive test using sound waves to create an image of the beating heart) has become so advanced that some degree of trivial MVP, it seems, can be found in almost anybody. According to some studies, as many as 25 – 35% of healthy individuals – people without any cardiac problems or any symptoms whatsoever – can be said to have some degree of MVP. In fact, whether you have MVP or not depends largely on what criteria the echocardiographer uses to make the call, and how badly the referring doctor wants you to have the diagnosis.</p>
<p>Over the years it has become customary to diagnose MVP in young, apparently normal people who have the temerity to complain about the highly disruptive symptoms of <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/cs/womensissues/a/dysautonomia.htm" target="_blank">dysautonomia</a> (such as fatigue, weakness, strange pains, dizziness, constipation, diarrhea, cramps or passing out), without supplying the kinds of objective physical or laboratory findings which, doctors insist, patients are always obligated to provide. Such thoughtless patients are now routinely sent for echocardiography, so that MVP can be diagnosed (since it can be diagnosed just about whenever it is looked for). The patient is then given the diagnosis of “mitral prolapse syndrome,” even though: a) the MVP is usually so trivial as to be nonexistent; b) the studies which claim to show an association between MVP and these sorts of symptoms are generally based on a gross over-diagnosis of MVP; and c) there is no credible theory based on actual physiology to explain how MVP – even real MVP, much less the trivial kind – might cause such symptoms.</p>
<p>But no matter. “Rule out MVP” has become one of the most common reasons for young, healthy people to be referred for echocardiography, and has become a stable source of income for cardiologists.</p>
<p>The story is similar for the association between <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/od/lesscommonheartproblems/a/pfo.htm" target="_blank">patent foramen ovale (PFO)</a> and migraine headaches.</p>
<p>In the developing fetus, the foramen ovale is a hole that is present in the atrial septum (the thin structure that separates the right atrium from the left atrium). At birth, a flap of tissue imposes itself over the foramen ovale, causing it to close. In some people, however – people with PFO – the tissue flap is still capable of flopping open. In people with PFO, the foramen ovale can open for a few moments if the pressure in the right atrium becomes transiently greater than the pressure in the left atrium, such as with coughing, or straining during a bowel movement.</p>
<p>In rare instances, strokes in healthy young patients have been attributed to PFO. The supporting theory is that a stroke can occur when a blood clot happens to be coursing through the right atrium at the precise moment when a person with PFO is coughing (for instance), allowing the clot to move into the left atrium, and on to the brain. And because this theory is at least plausible, in a young person who has an unexplained stroke and is then found to have a PFO, it makes at least some sense to close the PFO.</p>
<p>But the presence or absence of a PFO is a little like the presence or absence of MVP. Its diagnosis depends to some extent on how hard the echocardiographer looks for it, and on how much the referring doctor would appreciate the diagnosis. With modern echocardiographic equipment, at least some sign of PFO can be found in as many as 25% of normal individuals.</p>
<p>Being able to make this nifty diagnosis would be of little use to cardiologists if the only clinical problem it may cause is a one-in-a-million chance of stroke. One cannot make a living, or even make a decent car payment, doing echocardiograms in those extremely rare young patients with cryptic strokes. So it didn’t take long for cardiologists to draw a more useful association – this time, between PFOs and migraine headaches.</p>
<p>While all the things that have to happen in order for a PFO to cause a stroke are very unlikely, at least one can assemble a string of very unlikely events that, should they all occur simultaneously, might possibly produce a stroke. This is not the case with migraine. No plausible theory has been advanced to explain how PFO might cause migraines. The only reason PFO is being invoked as a cause for migraine is that when patients with migraine have been carefully studied for the presence of PFO, an increased incidence of PFO was found. (But again, when PFO is carefully sought in any population of patients, it is more likely to be found.) The only likely reason PFO has not been associated with cancer, red hair, type A personality, or difficulty in memorizing the multiplication tables is that cardiologists have not thought of looking for it (yet) in these conditions.</p>
<p>For cardiologists, the poorly-supported allegation that PFO causes migraine is particularly compelling, since not only can they get paid for the echocardiograms to look for PFOs in migraine sufferers, but also there is an invasive (and lucrative) procedure they can do to close PFOs, to “treat” the migraines. Studies to date have not been successful in showing that closing PFOs improves migraine headaches, but that hasn’t kept cardiologists from screening migraine patients for PFO, then offering them PFO closure as a therapeutic option.</p>
<p>Migraine sufferers are particularly vulnerable to this and many other unproven therapies, since they are often disabled by their condition, and in many cases medical science (or medical ignorance) offers them insufficient help. Consequently, anecdotal stories abound regarding unorthodox therapies that cure migraines. (DrRich, himself a migraine sufferer for many decades, has heard them all.) One undeniable truth is that merely performing PFO closures on enough migraine suffers is guaranteed to produce a patient here or there who will report a positive response. And despite the continued negativity of actual clinical trials so far, that’s what happened.</p>
<p>So, by anecdote &#8211; but not by controlled trial &#8211; closing PFOs can cure migraines.</p>
<p>But now it gets even worse for the neurologists. Any who ignored the cardiologist’s usurpation of dysautonomia, and who may have felt only a little more concern when cardiologists began to lay claim to migraine headaches, had best sit up and take notice. Because now, cardiologists are laying claim to Alzheimer’s Disease.</p>
<p>Recently, researchers presented a study suggesting that ablation procedures for atrial fibrillation are associated with a lower risk of subsequent Alzheimer’s disease. (Here’s some <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/od/atrialfibrillation/a/afib_overview.htm" target="_blank">information on atrial fibrillation and its treatment</a> if you are interested.) The study was presented as an abstract only, so we know relatively little about the specifics.</p>
<p>But, really. Atrial fibrillation and Alzheimer’s are both disorders associated with aging, so it is not surprising that they are associated with each other – in the same way that atrial fibrillation is associated with gray hair, cataracts, and bunions. Ablation for atrial fibrillation is a relatively lengthy and difficult procedure, whose results are relatively middling, and which carries a substantial risk of some really nasty complications. So these ablation procedures are generally reserved for carefully selected, reasonably ideal candidates – usually, the relatively young, relatively healthy atrial fibrillation patients, who are less likely to get Alzheimer’s disease over the next few years whether they have ablations or not.</p>
<p>So there is a lot to be cautious about in interpreting a preliminary study like this one.</p>
<p>But such objections are just quibbles. When this study was reported, the headlines in the typically discerning American press blared: “Ablation Procedures For Atrial Fibrillation Prevents Alzheimer’s.” Whatever the details and limitations of this study, cardiologists can now treat Alzheimer’s. Mission accomplished.</p>
<p>Then, just last week, the American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association released a formal scientific statement to the effect that vascular disorders are an important cause of Alzheimer&#8217;s disease. So this new statement clearly plants the flag for the AHA&#8217;s chief constituency &#8211; the cardiologists (who, DrRich reminds his readers, own vascular disorders).</p>
<p>Remarkably, the American Academy of Neurology, apparently failing utterly to grasp its significance, endorsed the statement. As a result, American neurologists have formally taken the knee before their new masters.</p>
<p>You see how this works?</p>
<p>Now, having for the last time, with an unerring sense of fair play, called this problem to the attention of his non-cardiologist medical colleagues, DrRich would like to finish by emphasizing an overarching point.</p>
<p>You can’t fight the Feds. When the Central Authority, at the point of a gun, decides to reach down into the world of the medical specialists, and dictate which medical services are no longer going to be feasible (all for the noblest of purposes, of course), the affected medical specialists have a limited range of possible responses. And fighting the Feds is NOT among these available responses. It would be more effective &#8211; and certainly safer &#8211; for doctors to fight against the change of the seasons.</p>
<p>So the affected specialists have only two options. They can contract their horizons, take what’s left, and try to make the best of it. Or, they can do what the Visigoths did when the people of the steppes fell upon them. Strike out against other, weaker tribes and take what’s theirs.</p>
<p>DrRich is not passing any judgment on his cardiology brethren here. (Would you have him judge a she-bear protecting her cubs?) He is just describing what’s happening. You who lie in their path can do with the information as you see fit.</p>
<p>In the meantime, DrRich remains supremely confident that his cardiology colleagues can find a nearly unlimited supply of plunder in this brave new world. They are very robust barbarians.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/attila-the-cardiologist/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>13</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1701/0/attila-cardiologist.mp3" length="1" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:00:01</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

Note: DrRich has issued this warning more than once before. It has always gone unheeded. He will now try one more time, with this updated and hopefully more compelling version, not because he actually believes it will do any more good than[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

Note: DrRich has issued this warning more than once before. It has always gone unheeded. He will now try one more time, with this updated and hopefully more compelling version, not because he actually believes it will do any more good than similar warnings did those other times, but because he is a humanitarian and time is growing short. American physicians will continue to ignore this warning at their own peril.
The history of Western civilization, from prehistoric times until relatively recently (so recently, in fact, that one cannot be absolutely certain the pattern has been broken), has been marked by successive waves of invasions by wild barbarians from the north. (This explains why DrRich will never completely trust the Canadians.)
Every few hundred years, one group of primitives or another &#8211; Scythians, Goths, Vandals, Huns, Avars, Norsemen, Bulgars, Mongols, and others named and unnamed &#8211; would sweep down upon their betters, upon the more civilized, more culturally and intellectually advanced people to the south, and by the expediencies of slaughter, rape and pillage, would take their land, possessions, freedom, and their lives. The advancing barbarian wave would eventually play itself out, and individual members of the untamed horde would simply settle in place, and over a few generations would become civilized themselves &#8211; until the next group of barbarians, in turn, would fall upon them.
It was a cycle as natural as the seasons.
What drove these irresistible barbarian movements? Historians still argue about it. Likely these violent migrations were caused by several different things &#8211; famine, plague, encroachment by even nastier barbarians from even farther north, and climate change (though this latter conjecture is now politically incorrect, since the official and proper view of the earth&#8217;s climate is that it was absolutely stable for millions of years, until Henry Ford and George Bush came along and bent the temperature curve upwards, like a hockey stick).
The reason DrRich brings all this up, of course, is: to warn his medical colleagues about the cardiologists.
Dear reader, the cardiologists are on the move. Their home turf is being encroached upon, their livelihoods gravely threatened, by the biggest, most ruthless, and most irresistible force on earth &#8211; the Feds. And in response they are gathering themselves into a great wave, and they are preparing to overrun the territories of less robust, less terrifying, more civilized (possibly more effete) medical specialists, and make themselves a new home.
Some medical specialists aside from the cardiologists are of course also predatory by nature, but for the most part their territorial incursions are predictable, localized and contained &#8211; the orthopedic surgeons and the neurosurgeons, for instance, will fight over lumbar disc surgery. Not so for the cardiologists.
DrRich is a cardiologist, and he knows that the Board Certification papers wielded by cardiologists do not read: &#8220;Certified in the practice of cardiac medicine,&#8221; but rather, &#8220;Certified in the practice of cardiovascular medicine.&#8221; Cardiologists, in other words, are officially certified not merely in the practice of heart disease, but also in the practice of any and all disorders affecting the blood vessels.
And DrRich urges his unsuspecting medical colleagues to please notice that blood vessels are prominent features of every organ system in the body. Cardiologists therefore recognize no natural limits to their rightful turf; if it is supplied by the vascular system, it is theirs. And if some other kind of specialist has traditionally claimed sovereignty over some particular organ &#8211; say, the liver &#8211; their continued success lies entirely in the fact that the cardiologists have not yet chosen to assert their rightful authority. (As it happens, hepatologists are relatively safe, as most cardiologists think of the liver as[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
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		<title>The Four Ways To Reduce Healthcare Spending</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/economics-and-that/the-four-ways-to-reduce-healthcare-spending</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/economics-and-that/the-four-ways-to-reduce-healthcare-spending#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Jun 2011 10:06:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Economics and that]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1632</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: &#160; Everyone agrees that national spending on healthcare is on a trajectory to bankrupt America during the lifetimes of even Old Farts like DrRich. And therefore, most folks* agree that we ought to do something to reduce our national spending on healthcare. ____ *The reason it&#8217;s only &#8220;most folks&#8221; who agree is that, apparently, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Everyone agrees that national spending on healthcare is on a trajectory to bankrupt America during the lifetimes of even Old Farts like DrRich. And therefore, most folks* agree that we ought to do something to reduce our national spending on healthcare.<br />
____<br />
*The reason it&#8217;s only &#8220;most folks&#8221; who agree is that, apparently, some folks are still partial to the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloward%E2%80%93Piven_strategy" target="_blank">Cloward-Piven strategy</a>, and continuing to spend on healthcare as we are doing today is the quickest and surest way to get there.<br />
____</p>
<p>Unfortunately, our national &#8220;discussion&#8221; on how to achieve this reduction in healthcare spending has devolved into a spectacle of accusations and counter-accusations, vituperation, abuse, and scurrility. Accordingly, not much useful has so far been achieved. Worse, the back-and-forth contumelies lobbed by the various interest groups in this national discussion have created a general sense among the public that the problem is so confused and chaotic, so rifled by conflicts of interest, and so very complex, as to be fundamentally unsolvable.</p>
<p>This general sense of despair is entirely unnecessary. DrRich is here to assure his readers that the problem of healthcare spending is not only solvable, but that it is destined to be solved &#8211; and within the lifetimes of many of us.</p>
<p>Furthermore, there are four ways (and only four ways) in which this inevitable reduction in healthcare spending can be achieved. By knowing these four methods of solving the problem, it is entirely possible &#8211; as we listen to all the debating, fighting, and reciprocal castigations, aspersions, distortions and lies being cast by and amongst the various interest groups &#8211; to understand which method is actually being espoused by which parties. If you happen to be partial to one method over another, this kind of knowledge can help you determine to whom you should offer your support.</p>
<p>And so, in the way of providing yet another remarkable service to his readers, DrRich is pleased to describe the four ways to reduce healthcare spending.</p>
<p><strong>Method One: Make all healthcare spending the responsibility of the individual. </strong></p>
<p>This is the method by which most of mankind has paid for healthcare for all but a few decades of the millions of years we have graced (or plagued) the planet: If you want or need healthcare (and if it exists), simply pay for it yourself. Proponents of this method offer two general arguments to support their position &#8211; an ethical one, and a practical one.</p>
<p>It is fundamentally unethical to insist that an individual&#8217;s healthcare services must be provided by others &#8211; claiming that healthcare is somehow intrinsically different from any other product or service which the individual may wish to acquire (such as food, clothing, housing, and iPADs) &#8211; because insisting on such a thing will place an unjustifiable burden on one&#8217;s fellows. Much of a person&#8217;s health (and therefore, of a person&#8217;s healthcare needs) is determined by lifestyle choices, so it is only right and proper for the individual to bear responsibility for those choices. Demanding that one&#8217;s fellow citizens take that responsibility for such personal choices is fundamentally unethical &#8211; and requiring them to do so will inevitably lead to tyranny by some Central Authority.</p>
<p>Method One also holds that, by returning the purchase of healthcare back into the realm of actual market forces, the laws of supply and demand will determine which services are actually needed, and what the rightful price for those services ought to be. So from a practical standpoint, Method One will at last recruit the efficiencies of the marketplace into the healthcare system, and bring the cost of healthcare services down to a level which individuals can actually afford. (And if people can&#8217;t or don&#8217;t want to pay for healthcare services, they are more likely to begin making lifestyle choices that will lower their odds of having to do so.) But whether or not individuals can afford medical services, at least the spending on those services will no longer be the burden of society &#8211; and the fiscal doom we now face will be cured.</p>
<p>Opponents of Method One point out that, inevitably, there will be individuals &#8211; and likely many, many individuals &#8211; who simply will not be able to afford to pay for healthcare services which are needed, and which are readily available for a price, and will therefore suffer preventable pain, disability, and death. Without some kind of public support for healthcare, heart-rending tragedies will abound, our civilization will become coarsened, anger will build, and insurrection will become a constant threat.</p>
<p><strong>Method Two: Make all healthcare spending the responsibility of a Central Authority.</strong></p>
<p>Method Two holds that, for straightforward ethical reasons, healthcare is a fundamental right; that whether one receives a healthcare service &#8211; a service that can relieve pain or prevent disability or death &#8211; ought not to depend on one&#8217;s ability to pay, but that healthcare services ought to be equally available to everyone. The only way to achieve this goal is to collectivize and centralize healthcare decisions and healthcare spending.</p>
<p>For proponents of Method Two, healthcare services are indeed fundamentally different from all other human needs &#8211; food, clothing, etc. &#8211; since the kind and the amount of healthcare services one needs are much less a matter of individual choice, but are foisted upon one by fate. Burdening individuals with the need to pay for such arbitrary and uncontrollable costs is not only unethical, but destabilizing.</p>
<p>Requiring individuals to pay for their own healthcare is destabilizing because, if a person&#8217;s lifetime of work and saving can be wiped out in an instant by an unexpected illness, people will be much less willing to work hard, take risks, and otherwise engage in the economic activities that drive our society. &#8220;Healthcare security,&#8221; which can only be provided by collective efforts, is thus necessary to a robust and sustainable civilization.</p>
<p>The methods by which healthcare costs can be controlled under a centralized system are straightforward. Obamacare, for instance, does so by explicitly empowering a <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-reform/what-does-the-ipab-tell-us-about-progressives" target="_blank">(nearly) all-powerful </a>Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) with all macro-level healthcare spending decisions. Furthermore, &#8220;guidelines&#8221; promulgated by various other expert panels will control spending at a more granular level, by determining which specific services doctors will be permitted to offer to which patients, and under what circumstances. Doctors will be strictly held, <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">under the threat of criminal prosecution</a>, to these guidelines. Finally, recognizing implicitly that many healthcare needs are indeed determined by individual lifestyle choices rather than purely by chance, public health experts will advance enforceable policies that will determine what and how much we eat, when and how long we sleep, what products we acquire and how we use them, and what activities we are permitted to perform where. (The public health experts are off to a <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/public-health-experts/the-right-to-bear-salt" target="_blank">very good start</a> in this effort!) If everyone within the healthcare system (and in our society) will simply follow the multitudinous directives laid out by the legions of sanctified experts, costs will at last be contained, and all will be well.</p>
<p>Regular readers will understand that there is no need for DrRich to reiterate in any detail here the arguments that have been raised by opponents of Method Two. These arguments can be summarized simply as follows: Method Two inevitably leads to tyranny.</p>
<p><strong>Method Three: Provide strictly limited public support for basic healthcare services, with individuals responsible for the remainder.</strong></p>
<p>Method Three attempts to combine the benefits of Methods One and Two, while avoiding their major disadvantages. Method Three recognizes that paying for all of one&#8217;s own healthcare is beyond the means of many individuals, and that therefore a modern, civil society ought to provide at least some healthcare to at least some of its citizens. At the same time, Method Three recognizes that the public funding of all healthcare is beyond the means of society, will inevitably lead to ruin, and that (both for these practical reasons and for ethical reasons) individuals ought to be responsible for paying for at least some of their own healthcare.</p>
<p>Numerous configurations are possible under Method Three. The key to controlling costs is that the dollars which society will spend on healthcare for individuals must be strictly defined and strictly limited, and cannot be open-ended. Method Three ought to assure that individuals will have ready access to, and the means to pay for, basic healthcare services, and that the chances of being financially ruined by a catastrophic illness are very low, but at the same time that most individuals should not and cannot rely entirely on public funding for their healthcare.</p>
<p>Examples of &#8220;Method Three&#8221; configurations include the detailed three-tiered solution that DrRich proposed <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Fixing-American-Healthcare-Unification-ebook/dp/B003U2RVU2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;m=AG56TWVU5XWC2&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1278431931&amp;sr=1-1" target="_blank">in his book</a>; the Ryan plan, which would limit Medicare expenditures by providing seniors with a fixed amount of money &#8211; on a means-tested sliding scale &#8211; with which to purchase their health insurance of choice; and, at least arguably, the original conception of Medicare, in which it was at least legal, if not expected, for seniors to pay for additional, non-covered medical services with their own funds (an option which is now very difficult, and <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/restraining-individual-prerogatives/medicare-already-does-it-limiting-individual-prerogatives-part-4" target="_blank">often illegal</a>).</p>
<p><strong>How is the battle shaping up?</strong></p>
<p>As DrRich sees it, Method One is simply a non-starter. For all practical purposes, and for good or bad, we moved irreversibly beyond a purely self-pay healthcare system over 60 years ago. So the real battle is between Method Two and Method Three. The feud between these two methods is going to be a bloody one.</p>
<p>The key difference between these two methods &#8211; both practically and philosophically &#8211; is whether individuals will be permitted to pay for at least some of their own healthcare with their own money. For reasons DrRich has <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/restraining-individual-prerogatives/the-real-fight-is-just-beginning-limiting-individual-prerogatives-part-1" target="_blank">laid out previously</a>, it is imperative under Method Two that all healthcare decisions and all healthcare spending be centralized. There can be no compromise on this.  The moment a compromise is made, we will inevitably wind up under a Method Three healthcare system.</p>
<p>Proponents of Method Two do not like DrRich (and have said so many times), because he has concluded (and <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-reform/the-key-to-the-obama-ryan-kerfuffle" target="_blank">often repeats</a>) that, viewed objectively, the only logical reason these people fight so hard to keep individuals from being required (or even permitted) to assume at least some financial responsibility for their own healthcare, is that their actual prime objective must be something other than to fix the healthcare system and control healthcare expenditures. Rather, their actual prime objective must be, and can only be, to centralize the control of our society. The healthcare fiscal crisis is merely the most expedient vehicle to achieve this prime objective. (Progressives mean well, as DrRich has said many times, but <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/drrichs-theory-of-progressive-thought" target="_blank">their plan for a perfect society</a> is always based on the need for all of us in the great unwashed masses to subsume our individual prerogatives in favor of the dictates of the enlightened leadership. Unfortunately, history teaches us that this plan never works out well.)</p>
<p>If this battle is ever resolved, therefore, it will hinge on whether individual Americans retain the legal right to purchase healthcare services with their own money. DrRich admits that this conclusion, regarding the essence of our ongoing healthcare debate, is not one which has been remarked by many other commentators on healthcare policy. It is, nonetheless, the case. An objective observer who pays close attention to the machinations of the nameless bureaucrats who are currently writing the rules and regulations under which Obamacare will finally be prosecuted will see that it is so.</p>
<p><strong>What about Method Four?</strong></p>
<p>There is little reason to spend much time discussing the fourth and final method for controlling healthcare expenditures. Nobody is a proponent of this method, so nobody discusses it. However, Method Four, at this moment, seems to be the most likely outcome. Indeed, at this moment it is our default method of choice.</p>
<p>Method Four is formulated as follows: Our skyrocketing healthcare expenditures are the chief driver of our national debt. Our national debt burden, unless we get control of it by controlling healthcare expenditures, will inevitably destroy our civil society. At the same time, our modern, sophisticated and very expensive healthcare system utterly requires a complex, modern, organized, high-tech society in which to function.</p>
<p>Therefore, our skyrocketing healthcare expenditures ultimately provides its own cure. Once society collapses, &#8220;healthcare services&#8221; will revert back to the roots-and-poultices methodologies that served mankind so well for millions of years. And healthcare, as well as other modern geegaws like cable TV and the Internet, will no longer be a fundamental human right, but will become a mere afterthought (if a thought at all) in a more primitive kind of society where life is nasty, brutish and short.</p>
<p>So, not to worry.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/economics-and-that/the-four-ways-to-reduce-healthcare-spending/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>8</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1632/0/cutting-healthcare-spending.mp3" length="15046530" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:15:40</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

&#160;
Everyone agrees that national spending on healthcare is on a trajectory to bankrupt America during the lifetimes of even Old Farts like DrRich. And therefore, most folks* agree that we ought to do something to reduce our national sp[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

&#160;
Everyone agrees that national spending on healthcare is on a trajectory to bankrupt America during the lifetimes of even Old Farts like DrRich. And therefore, most folks* agree that we ought to do something to reduce our national spending on healthcare.
____
*The reason it&#8217;s only &#8220;most folks&#8221; who agree is that, apparently, some folks are still partial to the Cloward-Piven strategy, and continuing to spend on healthcare as we are doing today is the quickest and surest way to get there.
____
Unfortunately, our national &#8220;discussion&#8221; on how to achieve this reduction in healthcare spending has devolved into a spectacle of accusations and counter-accusations, vituperation, abuse, and scurrility. Accordingly, not much useful has so far been achieved. Worse, the back-and-forth contumelies lobbed by the various interest groups in this national discussion have created a general sense among the public that the problem is so confused and chaotic, so rifled by conflicts of interest, and so very complex, as to be fundamentally unsolvable.
This general sense of despair is entirely unnecessary. DrRich is here to assure his readers that the problem of healthcare spending is not only solvable, but that it is destined to be solved &#8211; and within the lifetimes of many of us.
Furthermore, there are four ways (and only four ways) in which this inevitable reduction in healthcare spending can be achieved. By knowing these four methods of solving the problem, it is entirely possible &#8211; as we listen to all the debating, fighting, and reciprocal castigations, aspersions, distortions and lies being cast by and amongst the various interest groups &#8211; to understand which method is actually being espoused by which parties. If you happen to be partial to one method over another, this kind of knowledge can help you determine to whom you should offer your support.
And so, in the way of providing yet another remarkable service to his readers, DrRich is pleased to describe the four ways to reduce healthcare spending.
Method One: Make all healthcare spending the responsibility of the individual. 
This is the method by which most of mankind has paid for healthcare for all but a few decades of the millions of years we have graced (or plagued) the planet: If you want or need healthcare (and if it exists), simply pay for it yourself. Proponents of this method offer two general arguments to support their position &#8211; an ethical one, and a practical one.
It is fundamentally unethical to insist that an individual&#8217;s healthcare services must be provided by others &#8211; claiming that healthcare is somehow intrinsically different from any other product or service which the individual may wish to acquire (such as food, clothing, housing, and iPADs) &#8211; because insisting on such a thing will place an unjustifiable burden on one&#8217;s fellows. Much of a person&#8217;s health (and therefore, of a person&#8217;s healthcare needs) is determined by lifestyle choices, so it is only right and proper for the individual to bear responsibility for those choices. Demanding that one&#8217;s fellow citizens take that responsibility for such personal choices is fundamentally unethical &#8211; and requiring them to do so will inevitably lead to tyranny by some Central Authority.
Method One also holds that, by returning the purchase of healthcare back into the realm of actual market forces, the laws of supply and demand will determine which services are actually needed, and what the rightful price for those services ought to be. So from a practical standpoint, Method One will at last recruit the efficiencies of the marketplace into the healthcare system, and bring the cost of healthcare services down to a level which individuals can actually afford. (And if people can&#8217;t or don&#8217;t want to pay for healthcare services, they are more likely to begin making lifestyle choices that will lower their odds of[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
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		<title>When Is It OK Not To Follow The Guidelines?</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/when-is-it-ok-not-to-follow-the-guidelines</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/when-is-it-ok-not-to-follow-the-guidelines#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jun 2011 11:21:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cardiology Topics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fun with guidelines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1623</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: In an article appearing last week in the American Heart Journal, investigators concluded that if American doctors would prescribe for their patients with heart failure each of the six therapies which are most strongly recommended in current heart failure guidelines, 68,000 lives per year could be saved. The following (for the interest of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>In an article appearing last week in the <em>American Heart Journal</em>, investigators concluded that if American doctors would prescribe for their patients with heart failure each of the six therapies which are most strongly recommended in current heart failure guidelines, 68,000 lives per year could be saved.</p>
<p>The following (for the interest of the reader, and for the convenience of any attorneys who may follow DrRich&#8217;s offerings), is an ordered list of these six proven, life-saving heart failure therapies, along with the number of American lives that could be saved each year if only American doctors would stop grossly under-utilizing them in violation of published guidelines:</p>
<ul>
<li> aldosterone antagonist therapy &#8211; 21,407 lives</li>
<li> beta blockers &#8211; 12,922 lives</li>
<li> implantable defibrillators (ICDs) &#8211; 12,179 lives</li>
<li> cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) &#8211; 8317 lives</li>
<li> hydralazine plus isosorbide &#8211; 6655 lives</li>
<li> ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) &#8211; 6516 lives</li>
</ul>
<p>The authors, of course, are careful to point out that their analysis is based on statistical methods, and thus must be counted as merely estimates of the magnitude of the benefit that would actually occur should American doctors suddenly begin managing their heart failure patients appropriately. (Their presentation of these estimates to five significant figures implies a level of precision far in excess of what can be justified, and therefore must be an oversight not only by the authors, but also by the reviewers and the editors. But still, one gets the idea. A lot of preventable deaths are being left on the table.)</p>
<p>Several studies have reported, over and over again, that fewer than half of American patients with heart failure are receiving all the treatments available to them that have been shown to reduce symptoms and/or prolong life. Indeed, DrRich, on his <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com" target="_blank">patient-oriented heart disease website</a> at About.com, has long urged patients with heart failure to familiarize themselves with all the recommended therapies for their condition, so that when they are with their doctors at least somebody in the room will bring it up.</p>
<p>(Such advice, DrRich reminds his readers &#8211; all of whom are likely to be patients one day &#8211; ought to be considered generalizable for all American patients with all medical conditions, in an era when doctors are being coerced to ration healthcare at the bedside by omitting mention of sundry available medical services.)</p>
<p>But DrRich&#8217;s purpose here is not to address those unfortunate heart failure patients whose lives are being jeopardized by their physicians&#8217; acts of omission. but rather, is to strategize with his colleagues who treat heart failure patients as to how they should respond to this embarrassing revelation that by failing to follow published guidelines, they are killing so very many patients.</p>
<p>After all, <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines" target="_blank">only a few months ago</a>, when another research study showed that 23% of ICDs were being implanted outside of published guidelines (even though the large majority of those &#8220;inappropriate&#8221; implants turned out to be actually indicated, but were performed within a 40-day waiting period that the guidelines specified), not only was this violation played up on the evening news and splashed across newspaper headlines, but also<a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank"> the Department of Justice immediately launched an investigation</a> to determine whether it could bring criminal charges against implanting physicians. That is, failing to follow recommended guidelines to the letter is now not merely suboptimal medical practice, but also criminal behavior.</p>
<p>And how much worse than implanting indicated ICDs a few days earlier than the government would prefer, is behavior that causes the unnecessary deaths of 68,000 people a year? It seems to DrRich to be quite a bit worse.</p>
<p>So should American doctors who treat patients with heart failure be feeding their Swiss bank accounts, changing their identities, and stocking their lean-tos in the Montana backcountry?</p>
<p>DrRich brings good tidings &#8211; there is no need for you to overreact. The Feds cannot possibly prosecute all deviations from all clinical guidelines. Not only would that be unfeasible, it would also be counterproductive. And deviations from the heart failure guidelines are just the kind of deviations from which the Feds are inclined to look the other way.</p>
<p>We must remember that the primary directive of the American healthcare system, whether it is run by insurance companies or the government, is to ration healthcare covertly. Covert rationing means withholding whatever medical services you can, from whatever patients you can, whenever you think you can get away with it. If one remembers this simple rule, one can accurately predict the response of the health insurance companies or the government to any particular guideline violation.</p>
<p>So: When doctors implant expensive ICDs outside of the guidelines, even when the deviation is to place an indicated ICD a few days earlier than specified, it is a potentially criminal offense. Those ICDs cost a lot of money, and worse, prevent inexpensive sudden deaths, so it is clear that steps need to be taken to prevent their usage. Enforcing the guidelines to the letter therefore is imperative.</p>
<p>On the other hand, when deviations of guidelines result in NOT spending money (say, on drugs, ICDs, and CRT devices), those deviations will  be viewed quite differently. And when those same guideline deviations result in the premature deaths of tens of thousands of patients with chronic and expensive medical conditions (and who, had they survived for another five or 10 years, would have consumed lots and lots of extra healthcare dollars and, in most cases, Social Security payments), the last thing you would want to do is to engage in guideline-enforcement activities.</p>
<p>If you doubt DrRich on this point, ask yourself whether you&#8217;ve been treated to news stories over the past 10 days on how American doctors are killing 68,000 people each year by failing to follow guidelines. That story, it seems to DrRich, would be much sexier than the one that made a splash in January about ICDs being implanted too early. Yet we&#8217;ve heard next to nothing about it. These are not the kinds of guidelines violations we need to put a stop to. These guidelines violations do not fit the narrative.</p>
<p>Also, consider the editorial that accompanied the article in the <em>American Heart Journal</em> last week. It constitutes a strong apologist argument for violating the heart failure guidelines. It points out, rightly, that perhaps there were good reasons that some patients with heart failure do not receive all six of the recommended therapies, and that not all guidelines are applicable to all patients. It also points out that the number 68,000 was estimated by compounding several assumptions together, which would place large error bars around that estimate. So perhaps the guidelines deviations were not as lethal as the authors estimated. But most striking of all, the editorialist argues that it would just be too expensive to follow the guidelines for all patients with heart failure.  If ICDs were used in all patients for whom the guidelines say they should be used, for instance, this alone &#8220;would divert most of the money anticipated for all heart-failure care next year to these devices.&#8221;</p>
<p>The editorial is correct, and it is honest. It, at least, openly acknowledges that doctors are obligated to ration healthcare, based on costs, at the bedside, and that following these guidelines would violate the imperative to ration. Current guidelines on heart failure would cost a lot of money up front, and would result in the prolonged survival of a lot of very expensive Americans. And therefore, doctors will not be held accountable for failing to follow them.</p>
<p>American doctors can continue deviating from the heart failure guidelines, secure in the knowledge that their activity (or inactivity) will not capture unwanted attention from the Feds. These are not the guidelines our leaders are talking about when they assure the population that they are going to make sure that doctors are doing all the things the experts specify they should be doing.</p>
<p>These are those other kinds of guidelines.</p>
<p>If you are an American patient with any kind of medical problem whatsoever, DrRich begs you to become an expert in your medical condition. The patients with heart failure who are doing so, and who are prepared to challenge their doctors on their treatment, are among the minority who are receiving all the therapies proven to prolong their survival.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/when-is-it-ok-not-to-follow-the-guidelines/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>5</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1623/0/not-follow-guidelines.mp3" length="10676349" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:11:07</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

In an article appearing last week in the American Heart Journal, investigators concluded that if American doctors would prescribe for their patients with heart failure each of the six therapies which are most strongly recommended in curren[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

In an article appearing last week in the American Heart Journal, investigators concluded that if American doctors would prescribe for their patients with heart failure each of the six therapies which are most strongly recommended in current heart failure guidelines, 68,000 lives per year could be saved.
The following (for the interest of the reader, and for the convenience of any attorneys who may follow DrRich&#8217;s offerings), is an ordered list of these six proven, life-saving heart failure therapies, along with the number of American lives that could be saved each year if only American doctors would stop grossly under-utilizing them in violation of published guidelines:

 aldosterone antagonist therapy &#8211; 21,407 lives
 beta blockers &#8211; 12,922 lives
 implantable defibrillators (ICDs) &#8211; 12,179 lives
 cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) &#8211; 8317 lives
 hydralazine plus isosorbide &#8211; 6655 lives
 ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) &#8211; 6516 lives

The authors, of course, are careful to point out that their analysis is based on statistical methods, and thus must be counted as merely estimates of the magnitude of the benefit that would actually occur should American doctors suddenly begin managing their heart failure patients appropriately. (Their presentation of these estimates to five significant figures implies a level of precision far in excess of what can be justified, and therefore must be an oversight not only by the authors, but also by the reviewers and the editors. But still, one gets the idea. A lot of preventable deaths are being left on the table.)
Several studies have reported, over and over again, that fewer than half of American patients with heart failure are receiving all the treatments available to them that have been shown to reduce symptoms and/or prolong life. Indeed, DrRich, on his patient-oriented heart disease website at About.com, has long urged patients with heart failure to familiarize themselves with all the recommended therapies for their condition, so that when they are with their doctors at least somebody in the room will bring it up.
(Such advice, DrRich reminds his readers &#8211; all of whom are likely to be patients one day &#8211; ought to be considered generalizable for all American patients with all medical conditions, in an era when doctors are being coerced to ration healthcare at the bedside by omitting mention of sundry available medical services.)
But DrRich&#8217;s purpose here is not to address those unfortunate heart failure patients whose lives are being jeopardized by their physicians&#8217; acts of omission. but rather, is to strategize with his colleagues who treat heart failure patients as to how they should respond to this embarrassing revelation that by failing to follow published guidelines, they are killing so very many patients.
After all, only a few months ago, when another research study showed that 23% of ICDs were being implanted outside of published guidelines (even though the large majority of those &#8220;inappropriate&#8221; implants turned out to be actually indicated, but were performed within a 40-day waiting period that the guidelines specified), not only was this violation played up on the evening news and splashed across newspaper headlines, but also the Department of Justice immediately launched an investigation to determine whether it could bring criminal charges against implanting physicians. That is, failing to follow recommended guidelines to the letter is now not merely suboptimal medical practice, but also criminal behavior.
And how much worse than implanting indicated ICDs a few days earlier than the government would prefer, is behavior that causes the unnecessary deaths of 68,000 people a year? It seems to DrRich to be quite a bit worse.
So should American doctors who treat patients with heart failure be feeding their Swiss bank accounts, changing their identities, and stocking their[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Cardiologists Are Still Missing COURAGE</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/cardiologists-are-still-missing-courage</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/cardiologists-are-still-missing-courage#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jun 2011 11:21:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cardiology Topics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1615</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: In 2007, when the results were published from the COURAGE trial, all the experts agreed that this study would fundamentally change the way cardiologists managed patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD).* ____ *&#8221;Stable&#8221; CAD simply means that a patient with CAD is not suffering from one of the acute coronary syndromes &#8211; ACS, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>In 2007, when the results were published from the COURAGE trial, all the experts agreed that this study would fundamentally change the way cardiologists managed patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD).*<br />
____<br />
*&#8221;Stable&#8221; CAD simply means that a patient with CAD is not suffering from one of the <a href="http://heartdisease.about.com/od/coronaryarterydisease/a/ACS.htm" target="_blank">acute coronary syndromes</a> &#8211; ACS, an acute heart attack or unstable angina. At any given time, the large majority of patients with CAD are in a stable condition.<br />
____</p>
<p>But a new study tells us that hasn&#8217;t happened. The COURAGE trial has barely budged the way cardiologists treat patients with stable CAD.</p>
<p>Lots of people want to know why. As usual, DrRich is here to help.</p>
<p>The COURAGE trial compared the use of stents vs. drug therapy in patients with stable CAD. Over twenty-two hundred patients were randomized to receive either optimal drug therapy, or optimal drug therapy plus the insertion of stents. Patients were then followed for up to 7 years. Much to the surprise (and consternation) of the world&#8217;s cardiologists, there was no significant difference in the incidence of subsequent heart attack or death between the two groups. The addition of stents to optimal drug therapy made no difference in outcomes.</p>
<p>This, decidedly, was a result which was at variance with the Standard Operating Procedure of your average American cardiologist, whose scholarly analysis of the proper treatment of CAD has always distilled down to: &#8220;Blockage? Stent!&#8221;</p>
<p>But after spending some time trying unsuccessfully to explain away these results, even cardiologists finally had to admit that the COURAGE trial was legitimate, and that it was a game changer. (And to drive the point home, the results of COURAGE have since been reproduced in the BARI-2D trial.) Like it or not, drug therapy ought to be the default treatment for patients with stable CAD, and stents should be used only when drug therapy fails to adequately control symptoms.</p>
<p>When the COURAGE results were initially published they made a huge splash among not only cardiologists, but also the public in general. So cardiologists did not have the luxury of hiding behind (as doctors so often do when a study comes out the &#8220;wrong&#8221; way) the usual, relative obscurity of most clinical trials. Given the widespread publicity the study generated, it seemed inconceivable that the cardiology community could ignore these results and get away with it.</p>
<p>But a new study, published just last month in <em>JAMA</em>, reveals that ignore COURAGE they have.</p>
<p>In a registry-based survey that covered over 500,000 patients treated in over 1,000 hospitals, the new article reports that there has been little change in the use of drug therapy in patients with stable CAD since the COURAGE study was published. Prior to the publication of COURAGE, only 43.5% of patients who received stents had been tried on optimal drug therapy; two years after publication of COURAGE, that number had &#8220;increased&#8221; to 44.7%. And while the increase was statistically significant, observers have agreed that it is nonetheless trivial, and that the COURAGE trial apparently has made next to no impact on the practice patterns of cardiologists.</p>
<p>This revelation is proving embarrassing to even the usual spokespersons for the cardiology community, the luminaries who are always trotted out to explain the nuances of their colleagues&#8217; sometimes odd behaviors, and to explain why those behaviors, actually, are not only reasonable but commendable. This time they are at a loss.</p>
<p>The best they can do, according to their commentary on <a href="http://theheart.org/article/1224061.do" target="_blank">TheHeart.org</a>, is to offer two speculations: a) that, sometimes and for mysterious reasons, it can take several years for the results of important randomized trials to &#8220;disseminate&#8221; down to practicing physicians, and that apparently even the highly-sophisticated cardiology community is not immune to this phenomenon, and b) the cardiologists are waiting for their professional organizations to issue updated &#8220;guidelines&#8221; on stable CAD that take the COURAGE results into account. (The last official guidelines were published in 2002.)</p>
<p>Regarding this first explanation, DrRich can assure his readers that the results of the COURAGE trial were not slow to disseminate to American cardiologists. The results (and their implications) were, in fact, known immediately to every one &#8211; indeed, the buzz was palpable. It was, perhaps, the biggest news in the cardiology world in several years. If any cardiologists missed this seismic event, they are among that tiny, disconnected minority that is still out making house calls and distributing foxglove leaf, and likely would not know what a stent is, let alone be using them indiscriminately.</p>
<p>Regarding the &#8220;guidelines&#8221; excuse, DrRich is speechless. Since when are cardiologists guilty of following clinical guidelines to a fault?  If doctors, especially cardiologists, are already sticking strictly, in every particular, to sets of guidelines promulgated by committees of distant experts, even when they know those guidelines are out of date and, frankly, wrong, then (if you are an American patient) all is already lost.</p>
<p>DrRich does not buy either of these explanations. So what, then, is the real reason?</p>
<p>Is it greed? This is likely part of the explanation, and is all of the explanation for some cardiologists. (Self-interest plays as large a role in determining the actions of some practicing physicians as it does in determining the actions of those physicians whose reputations and hoped-for futures as &#8220;policy experts&#8221; requires them to denigrate the motives of practicing physicians every chance they get.) Indeed, DrRich would not be surprised to learn that some cardiologists of a certain age, realizing that the days of wine and roses are rapidly drawing to a close, are scrambling to insert every stent they can &#8211; and any other medical accoutrement they can justify deploying &#8211; as rapidly as possible, and then get the hell out.</p>
<p>But DrRich is certain that most cardiologists are genuinely trying to do what is best for their patients, and he believes that the failure to respond to the COURAGE trial is too generalized and too widespread to attribute entirely to greed.</p>
<p>Rather, DrRich believes that the results of the COURAGE trial simply fly in the face of your typical cardiologist&#8217;s world view. And while they undoubtedly understand those results intellectually, and even accept the results explicitly, they are simply having trouble incorporating those results into their conceptual framework for CAD. And since CAD is their livelihood, their philosophy, their sun, moon and stars, this amounts to an existential crisis.</p>
<p>When Galileo championed the Copernican view of the universe, and backed it up with sound scientific observations, he felt his views would receive approbation from the highest authority. After all, his old friend, the intellectual cleric Barberini (who had supported the publication of his book), was now Pope Urban VIII. But, while as Barberini his old friend could afford to be intellectually pure, as Pope Uban he could not. For Urban to accept Galileo&#8217;s work would formally call all Scripture into question, and seriously undermine the integrity and authority of the organization that had provided structure to western civilization for 1000 years. So Galileo had to suffer.</p>
<p>DrRich thinks that cardiologists find themselves in the position of Pope Urban &#8211; having the intellect to understand and accept certain surprising scientific results, but unable to put those results into practice without wrecking an entire way of life, and indeed, an entire way of looking at the world. They can either ignore (with, no doubt, some discomfort) the clear results of COURAGE, or abandon the world view that provides their sustenance and gives their lives meaning. That, DrRich thinks, is the real problem.</p>
<p>Regular readers will know that DrRich is not one to articulate a problem, and then simply walk away, leaving everyone to wonder what to do about it. So, as usual, DrRich has a suggestion.</p>
<p>The cure for the cardiologists&#8217; existential problem is to articulate and accept a new world view, one that incorporates the results of COURAGE (and other clinical trial results that may seem puzzling under the old world view), and which places the proper usage of drugs and stents for CAD into a serviceable framework. While adopting this new world view will not be pain-free, it is one to which cardiologists can adapt &#8211; just as the Church eventually adapted to the heliocentric view of the cosmos.</p>
<p>And so, as a public service to his cardiology colleagues (and to their patients), DrRich will articulate a new world view on CAD. DrRich has not himself invented this new world view &#8211; most academic cardiologists, he believes, already endorse it, at least implicitly. But an explicit statement of the new world view &#8211; and an explicit rejection of the old &#8211; may help a few of DrRich&#8217;s cardiology friends to begin to accept the new &#8220;heliocentric&#8221; view of CAD, and thus to cure the existential crisis which (he postulates) is holding them back.</p>
<p><strong>The Old World View</strong></p>
<p>The old world view of CAD goes as follows: CAD produces localized plaques in the coronary arteries, which gradually grow out into the artery&#8217;s lumen, causing partial blockage of the artery. These &#8220;significant&#8221; plaques (generally regarded as plaques that are blocking 75 &#8211; 80% of the artery&#8217;s lumen) can produce angina (because during exertion not enough blood can get through the partial obstruction), and more importantly, can eventually cause ACS. The ACS occurs because the ballooning plaque can eventually rupture, causing a blood clot to form in the vessel, and producing sudden, high-grade occlusion of the artery.</p>
<p>Therefore, the cardiologist&#8217;s job is to identify these significant plaques and to stent them. Doing so will relieve &#8220;stable&#8221; angina, and will prevent ACS.</p>
<p>In the old world view, CAD is a localized process, that can be adequately treated with localized measures. If the location of the offending plaques can be identified (by cardiac catheterization) they can be treated. Heart attacks and death are thereby prevented.</p>
<p><strong>The New World View</strong></p>
<p>Whether or not CAD is producing a few localized &#8220;significant&#8221; plaques, the atherosclerosis that causes CAD is a generalized, and not a localized, process. That is, there are usually many plaques within the coronary arteries, most of which are not only &#8220;insignificant&#8221; (less than 75-80% blockages), but may even be nearly invisible during coronary angiography. Furthermore, it now appears that the majority of heart attacks (and other forms of ACS) occur when one of these &#8220;insignificant&#8221; plaques ruptures.</p>
<p>This is why it is not particularly unusual for somebody who has a &#8220;clean&#8221; coronary angiography to have a heart attack soon thereafter. And this is why aggressively treating stable but &#8220;significant&#8221; blockages with stents does not measurably reduce the incidence of heart attack and death.</p>
<p>CAD is a generalized, progressive disease. The treatment of CAD therefore inherently ought to be a medical (and not a localized, quasi-surgical) process. Ideally, one ought to use drugs that stabilize plaques and reduce the risk of rupture (statins, possibly beta blockers), along with drugs that reduce the propensity of blood to clot within the coronary artery, should a rupture occur (aspirin). And research should be aimed at identifying unstable plaques and finding better ways to stabilize them, and not at tweaking stents to render them marginally better than the prior ones.</p>
<p>A stent is fine to use on a significant blockage that is producing stable angina, but what it is accomplishing, one must realize, is merely to treat the symptom of angina &#8211; and not to prevent future heart attacks.</p>
<p>There.*</p>
<p>____<br />
* Under the new world view as well as the old, when ACS is actually occurring &#8211; when a plaque has ruptured and acute occlusion of an artery is taking place &#8211; inserting a stent often appears to be beneficial.<br />
____</p>
<p>Now that DrRich has entirely relieved the existential crisis all you cardiologists out there have been experiencing (you&#8217;re welcome!), all that remains is for somebody to address those few outliers among you who still haven&#8217;t heard about the COURAGE trial, or who are doggedly committed to following approved clinical guidelines under all circumstances, come hell or high water, even when they know them to be wrong, or who are just too consumed by greed to do the right thing.</p>
<p>While DrRich would consider it far from his method of choice for changing physicians&#8217; behavior, and is in fact appalled by it, the Department of Justice&#8217;s new policy of conducting, Urban-like, <a href="http://www.justice.gov/usao/md/Public-Affairs/press_releases/Press10/Salisbury%20Cardiologist%20Indicted%20for%20Implanting%20Unnecessary%20Cardiac%20Stents.pdf" target="_blank">inquisitions</a> against physicians who are slow to adopt the Central Authority&#8217;s preferred practice patterns, and then criminally prosecuting those who are slow to comply, should work wonders in this regard.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/cardiologists-are-still-missing-courage/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>4</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1615/0/courage.mp3" length="15349133" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:15:59</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

In 2007, when the results were published from the COURAGE trial, all the experts agreed that this study would fundamentally change the way cardiologists managed patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD).*
____
*&#8221;Stable[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

In 2007, when the results were published from the COURAGE trial, all the experts agreed that this study would fundamentally change the way cardiologists managed patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD).*
____
*&#8221;Stable&#8221; CAD simply means that a patient with CAD is not suffering from one of the acute coronary syndromes &#8211; ACS, an acute heart attack or unstable angina. At any given time, the large majority of patients with CAD are in a stable condition.
____
But a new study tells us that hasn&#8217;t happened. The COURAGE trial has barely budged the way cardiologists treat patients with stable CAD.
Lots of people want to know why. As usual, DrRich is here to help.
The COURAGE trial compared the use of stents vs. drug therapy in patients with stable CAD. Over twenty-two hundred patients were randomized to receive either optimal drug therapy, or optimal drug therapy plus the insertion of stents. Patients were then followed for up to 7 years. Much to the surprise (and consternation) of the world&#8217;s cardiologists, there was no significant difference in the incidence of subsequent heart attack or death between the two groups. The addition of stents to optimal drug therapy made no difference in outcomes.
This, decidedly, was a result which was at variance with the Standard Operating Procedure of your average American cardiologist, whose scholarly analysis of the proper treatment of CAD has always distilled down to: &#8220;Blockage? Stent!&#8221;
But after spending some time trying unsuccessfully to explain away these results, even cardiologists finally had to admit that the COURAGE trial was legitimate, and that it was a game changer. (And to drive the point home, the results of COURAGE have since been reproduced in the BARI-2D trial.) Like it or not, drug therapy ought to be the default treatment for patients with stable CAD, and stents should be used only when drug therapy fails to adequately control symptoms.
When the COURAGE results were initially published they made a huge splash among not only cardiologists, but also the public in general. So cardiologists did not have the luxury of hiding behind (as doctors so often do when a study comes out the &#8220;wrong&#8221; way) the usual, relative obscurity of most clinical trials. Given the widespread publicity the study generated, it seemed inconceivable that the cardiology community could ignore these results and get away with it.
But a new study, published just last month in JAMA, reveals that ignore COURAGE they have.
In a registry-based survey that covered over 500,000 patients treated in over 1,000 hospitals, the new article reports that there has been little change in the use of drug therapy in patients with stable CAD since the COURAGE study was published. Prior to the publication of COURAGE, only 43.5% of patients who received stents had been tried on optimal drug therapy; two years after publication of COURAGE, that number had &#8220;increased&#8221; to 44.7%. And while the increase was statistically significant, observers have agreed that it is nonetheless trivial, and that the COURAGE trial apparently has made next to no impact on the practice patterns of cardiologists.
This revelation is proving embarrassing to even the usual spokespersons for the cardiology community, the luminaries who are always trotted out to explain the nuances of their colleagues&#8217; sometimes odd behaviors, and to explain why those behaviors, actually, are not only reasonable but commendable. This time they are at a loss.
The best they can do, according to their commentary on TheHeart.org, is to offer two speculations: a) that, sometimes and for mysterious reasons, it can take several years for the results of important randomized trials to &#8220;disseminate&#8221; down to practicing physicians, and that apparently even the highly-sophisticated cardiology community is not immune to this phenomenon, and b) the cardiologists are waiting for their profes[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>The Right To Bear Salt</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/public-health-experts/the-right-to-bear-salt</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/public-health-experts/the-right-to-bear-salt#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jun 2011 09:02:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Public Health Experts]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1597</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: &#160; &#160; Q. What is the difference between a public health expert and Il Duce? A. Mussolini was not nearly as arrogant as a public health expert. In prior posts, DrRich related how two major publc health efforts over the past few decades &#8211; the effort to put all of us on low-fat diets, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Podcast:</p>
<p></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IlDuc1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-1602" title="IlDuc" src="http://covertrationingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IlDuc1.jpg" alt="" width="252" height="200" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>Q. What is the difference between a public health expert and Il Duce?</em><br />
<em>A. Mussolini was not nearly as arrogant as a public health expert.</em></p>
<p>In prior posts, DrRich related how two major publc health efforts over the past few decades &#8211; <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/obesity-and-rationing/how-the-obesity-crisis-is-like-the-mortgage-crisis" target="_blank">the effort to put all of us on low-fat diets</a>, and <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/are-public-health-experts-wrong-about-cholesterol-too" target="_blank">the effort to reduce everyone&#8217;s cholesterol levels</a> &#8211; have amounted to massive experiments, based upon insufficiently-tested assumptions and surmises and hypotheses which the experts arrogantly (and incorrectly) determined to be fact, and which were conducted upon the entire American population without its knowledge or consent.</p>
<p>These public health experiments cost billions of dollars, needlessly transformed large swatches of American industry, and (at least in the case of low-fat diets) likely produced significant harm to the citizenry. Furthermore, despite such results, these misbegotten public health efforts have inured Americans to the notion that it is right and proper for government experts to determine for each of us what we must and must not eat.</p>
<p>DrRich now feels obligated to call his readers&#8217; attention to yet another experiment which these same public health experts have launched, an experiment under which each of us &#8211; once again &#8211; is to become an unwitting research subject, an experiment whose results are unpredictable, but which has a realistic chance of producing harm to many of us. DrRich speaks, of course, of the <a href="http://www.cnpp.usda.gov/DGAs2010-PolicyDocument.htm" target="_blank">new US dietary guidelines</a>, published earlier this year, regarding sodium.</p>
<p>Those new guidelines begin with these established &#8220;facts:&#8221; Sodium is bad. We all get too much of it. And if we restricted our salt intake to a much lower amount than we are likely getting today, we will all become healthier and live longer. Relying on this received wisdom, the new guidelines call for us to cut back to 2300 mg of sodium per day &#8211; unless we are 51 or older, or African-American, or hypertensive (and most Americans fall into one of these three categories), in which case we are to restrict our sodium to 1500 mg per day.</p>
<p>For anyone who strays from eating only fresh fruits and vegetables, this kind of restriction is likely to prove a challenge. A nice bowl of dry cereal, for instance, even before you add milk, may give you up to 1000 mg of sodium.</p>
<p>Some Americans might consider such severe restrictions to be merely a statement of an ideal &#8211; a goal that, while laudatory, is entirely unreasonable or impracticable, one which we ought not expect to achieve with any degree of perfection, across a large population, in real life. But DrRich assures his readers that this is not at all how the Feds are viewing the matter.</p>
<p>The Institute of Medicine, for instance, is all over it. The IOM recently published (in conjunction with the new Guidelines) its &#8220;<a href="http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=12818&amp;page=R1" target="_blank">Strategies To Reduce Sodium Intake In the US</a>.&#8221; Noting that public health experts have tried in vain for decades to get Americans to cut back on salt, the IOM says the time for persuasion by education has passed. The great unwashed are proved to be recalcitrant, yet again, to reason and science. It&#8217;s time to take the gloves off. So the IOM calls for the US government (specifically, the FDA) to use its regulatory firepower to enforce &#8211; once and for all &#8211; the kind of sodium restriction that the public welfare demands.</p>
<p>Specifically, the IOM calls for the FDA to reclassify &#8220;salt&#8221; from a food ingredient categorized as GRAS (&#8220;generally regarded as safe,&#8221; i.e., items which have been used for millennia in food preparation without regulatory oversight, such as pepper, parsley, or vinegar, and which are accepted as being harmless), to a &#8220;food additive&#8221; (i.e., a substance which is certifiably harmful, and for which strict, enforceable rules must be promulgated regarding its use). Re-classifying salt as a food additive will give the FDA the authority it needs to enforce its usage (as with any other regulated substance) in the food processing industry, in restaurants, and even, one must assume, in the home. With this new designation, the FDA (and other government agencies) will be able to deploy whatever regulatory and enforcement muscle they must, in order to assure that the Guidelines for sodium are at last realized.</p>
<p>This is serious stuff. The government at last seems dedicated, as never before, to actually implementing a significant sodium restriction for all of us within the teeming masses. All, of course, for our own good.</p>
<p>You might think, if you have not been paying attention, that in order for the Feds to launch into such a concerted, sustained, and widespread public health effort, the scientific data to support such an action must be pretty airtight. But if you have been paying attention, you will not be surprised to hear that the actual advisability of restricting dietary sodium across the entire population is anything but settled. In fact, it remains very controversial among scientists.*</p>
<p>____<br />
*DrRich stresses here that this discussion refers only to sodium restriction applied across the population. Sodium restriction for at least some people who already have hypertension &#8211; or a few other medical conditions such as heart failure and some types of liver and kidney disease &#8211; is well-established as being beneficial.<br />
____</p>
<p>There are at least three outstanding questions regarding the advisability of a general policy enforcing salt restriction. Until these questions are addressed, the implementation of a generalized and severe sodium restriction across the population seems to DrRich to be quite ill-advised (and, of course, incredibly arrogant).</p>
<p><strong>1) Does Sodium Restriction Really Do Any Good?</strong></p>
<p>DrRich could write several very long posts addressing just this one question. Instead, he will simply summarize the problem.</p>
<p>The question hinges on the relationship of salt intake to blood pressure &#8211; that is, does higher salt intake cause the blood pressure to increase? This turns out to be a difficult question to answer with any scientific precision. The studies are difficult to conduct, and difficult to interpret. Accurately measuring sodium intake in any sizeable population of patients is nearly impossible; and even measuring blood pressure (which varies tremendously from minute to minute, depending on activity, stress, and many other factors) in a reproducible way within a population of patients is difficult.</p>
<p>Scores of studies have been conducted to try to address this question. And one can assemble from these studies a large group which will show that salt intake correlates nicely with blood pressure. On the other hand, one can also assemble from these studies a large group that shows it does not. And for decades, the salt vs. blood pressure question has been divided into two camps, each of which have major conflicts of interest*, and which cite only those studies which tend to support their point of view.</p>
<p>____<br />
* In one camp are the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National High Blood Pressure Education Program, the Institute of Medicine, and academic experts on hypertension whose careers have been based on funding from these organizations, and whose reputations and academic standing rely on sodium intake being a major determinant of blood pressure and health.  In the other camp are the Salt Institute, the big manufacturers of processed foods, and sundry academic experts on hypertension whose careers have enjoyed funding from these sources.  Take your pick.<br />
____</p>
<p>To see just how deeply politics is involved in the salt controversy, DrRich highly recommends <a href="http://csustan.csustan.edu/~tom/classes/Older-classes/HONS3050/Salt-and-policy.pdf" target="_blank">this article</a> by Gary Taubes, which appeared several years ago in <em>Science</em>, outlining the machinations that have been employed by the various parties in interpreting some of the complex studies that have attempted to correlate salt intake with blood pressure.</p>
<p>DrRich is convinced that, at the very least, this is not a settled question.</p>
<p>But even if it were a settled question, and sodium intake did indeed correlate nicely with blood pressure across the whole population (which, at a minimum,  would be a necessary conclusion in order to legitimately enforce a sodium restriction across the whole population), the degree of blood pressure reduction that even sodium-restriction-enthusiasts predict, even employing very significant salt restrictions, seems trivial &#8211; most experts predict an reduction in blood pressure of only 1-2 mmHg.  Assertions that public health experts often make to defend their sodium restriction guidelines, to the effect that this kind of tiny reduction in blood pressure on a worldwide basis would save over 100,000 lives per year, is (scientifically speaking) hogwash. Such estimates are calculated from strings of assumptions piled upon assumptions, and have little or no bearing on reality.</p>
<p>The fact is that we just don&#8217;t know what effect it would have on the population&#8217;s health to significantly restrict salt intake in everybody. We don&#8217;t know either the magnitude of blood pressure reduction it would achieve, or the improvement in clinical outcomes that would follow such blood pressure reduction.</p>
<p>We could find out if we really wanted to &#8211; by doing a large, randomized clinical trial to test the hypothesis. But the public health experts have determined that such a randomized trial is not necessary (the issue being &#8220;settled&#8221;), and not desirable (time being of the essence).</p>
<p>They would rather conduct a non-randomized experiment that enrolls every living American as an unwitting research subject. Then, in a couple of decades (reminiscent of the low-fat diet &#8220;experiment&#8221;), maybe we could figure out how it all worked out.</p>
<p><strong>2) Does Sodium Restriction Cause Harm?</strong></p>
<p>Here is a question that the public health experts, who consider salt restriction to be an unalloyed good, really object to. They tend to get downright nasty when anyone brings it up.</p>
<p>But, as it happens, it is a legitimate question.</p>
<p>Sodium is an extremely critical substance in any living creature. For any living cell to function normally, it must exist in an environment that contains, within a narrow range, just the right concentration of sodium. Consequently, living beings have evolved a complex series of mechanisms to assure an adequate sodium concentration under any and all circumstances. So, if animals are made to survive on a severely sodium-restricted diet, these homeostatic mechanisms are called into play to severely restrict the loss of sodium from the body. Such mechanisms can have many secondary effects.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.jrnjournal.org/article/1051-2276%2895%2990039-X/abstract" target="_blank">In states of sodium depletion</a>, tissues are more susceptible to injury from ischemia (lack of oxygen), a condition seen in heart attacks and strokes. Kidney damage caused by many types of medication will occur much more readily in states of sodium depletion. The way the kidneys handle various drugs is also altered when sodium intake is reduced, leading to potentially harmful changes in the blood concentrations of certain medications. The renin-aldosterone system is activated under salt restriction, which can have several adverse effects. (In fact, a major therapy for several medical conditions, such as heart failure and &#8211; ironically &#8211; hypertension, centers around suppressing the renin-aldosterone system.) Adrenaline levels and LDL cholesterol are increased when sodium is restricted. And <a href="http://jasn.asnjournals.org/content/15/1_suppl/S47.full" target="_blank">at least one study</a>, disturbingly, has correlated sodium restriction with an increase in cardiovascular mortality.</p>
<p>Calling attention to these kinds of findings just makes the sodium-restriction camp angry, and they usually respond by pointing out that so-and-so got a grant from the Salt Institute. (DrRich agrees that there are conflicts of interest, but those conflicts are flagrant on both sides.)</p>
<p>The fact is that the scores of observational trials that have been conducted do not allow anyone to reach a definitive conclusion about the advisability &#8211; regarding either its efficacy or its safety &#8211; of salt restriction across the population. An objective observer, operating on established scientific principles, would have to say that the only action that makes any sense at this point would be to conduct that large, randomized clinical trial, using actual clinical outcomes as an endpoint. Only such a trial can begin to sort out the discrepancies, and has any chance of allowing us to resolve the differences (by any means other than by fiat).</p>
<p>The public health experts, however, hold the high ground. That is, they control the &#8220;opinion&#8221; of the various health-related agencies wielded by the Central Authority. And they fail to recognize any discrepancies whatsoever. For them, the issue is settled, and it is past time to sweep aside any opposition, and implement the plan. Proponents of salt restriction have the will and they have the authority, and accordingly they have determined: Just do it.</p>
<p><strong>3) Is It Even Possible To Change Sodium Intake By Public Policy?</strong></p>
<p>Again, maintaining the proper sodium concentration in tissues is critical to life, so living creatures have evolved a complexity of mechanisms to assure that the concentration of sodium remains within the proper range.</p>
<p><a href="http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/content/early/2009/10/15/CJN.04660709.full.pdf+html" target="_blank">Among these</a>, it now appears, is an inherent &#8220;sodium appetite&#8221; enjoyed by all humans and all animals, an in-born mechanism that holds the body&#8217;s sodium content to a certain set-point, and determines how much sodium an individual will ingest each day to keep to that set-point. This set-point is maintained by a complex neural network involving several centers within the central nervous system, as well as inputs from the peripheral tissues. One&#8217;s physiology regulates one&#8217;s sodium intake to satisfy the body&#8217;s needs.</p>
<p>Furthermore, studies of sodium intake across a wide array of human populations, living under a wide variety of conditions and dietary constraints, also show that the range of salt consumption humans take in to achieve their set-point is remarkably universal, and is maintained within a fairly narrow range. That is, not only do humans consume the proper amount of sodium as determined by the body&#8217;s needs, but across the diversity of humanity that &#8220;automatic&#8221; sodium intake is maintained within a remarkably fixed range. (Sodium intake moves within that range to maintain the body&#8217;s proper sodium set-point.)</p>
<p>As it happens, the lower limit of that universal, naturally occurring, &#8220;optimal&#8221; range of sodium intake is roughly 2300 mg/day.</p>
<p>Astoundingly, this natural lower limit, determined by our physiology, is the <em>same as the the upper limit</em> our government would have many Americans consume. And our natural lower limit is far higher than the 1500 mg/day upper limit our government will be enforcing for more than half of us.</p>
<p>In other words, by decree, our government would have every American consume an amount of sodium that is below the optimal range as determined by human physiology. Almost by definition, anyone living under the recommended guidelines would likely be unable to maintain proper sodium concentrations through sodium intake alone, and would need to recruit the secondary, sodium-retaining, potentially-harmful physiological mechanisms (such as the renin-aldosterone system) to keep sodium concentrations at an adequate level.</p>
<p>In any case, it is apparent that even if a universally-applied policy of significant sodium restriction was proved to be safe and effective, it is not at all clear that it is possible to make people comply with such a restriction. This kind of restriction will be fighting our inherent &#8220;sodium appetite&#8221; regulator that has been forged through millions of years of evolution. This kind of restriction would appear to fly in the face of our human physiology.</p>
<p>We need salt, dear readers, we truly do. The only reason the Founders did not include an additional paragraph in the Second Amendment (to the effect that, &#8220;A palatable diet being necessary to the health and well-being of a free People, the right of the People to bear salt shall not be infringed,&#8221;) is that it never occurred to them that any government would ever attempt to restrict such an inherent physiological necessity.</p>
<p>Of course, anyone who has observed our government at work &#8211; as it attempts to implement policies that require a fundamental change in human nature, or that require the <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/obesity-and-rationing/how-the-obesity-crisis-is-like-the-mortgage-crisis" target="_blank">repeal of the basic laws of economics</a> &#8211; should not be surprised at the notion that our Progressive leaders would also try to repeal human physiology.</p>
<p>I mean, why the heck not?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/public-health-experts/the-right-to-bear-salt/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>4</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1597/0/salt-experts.mp3" length="19166354" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:19:58</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

&#160;

&#160;
Q. What is the difference between a public health expert and Il Duce?
A. Mussolini was not nearly as arrogant as a public health expert.
In prior posts, DrRich related how two major publc health efforts over the past few dec[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

&#160;

&#160;
Q. What is the difference between a public health expert and Il Duce?
A. Mussolini was not nearly as arrogant as a public health expert.
In prior posts, DrRich related how two major publc health efforts over the past few decades &#8211; the effort to put all of us on low-fat diets, and the effort to reduce everyone&#8217;s cholesterol levels &#8211; have amounted to massive experiments, based upon insufficiently-tested assumptions and surmises and hypotheses which the experts arrogantly (and incorrectly) determined to be fact, and which were conducted upon the entire American population without its knowledge or consent.
These public health experiments cost billions of dollars, needlessly transformed large swatches of American industry, and (at least in the case of low-fat diets) likely produced significant harm to the citizenry. Furthermore, despite such results, these misbegotten public health efforts have inured Americans to the notion that it is right and proper for government experts to determine for each of us what we must and must not eat.
DrRich now feels obligated to call his readers&#8217; attention to yet another experiment which these same public health experts have launched, an experiment under which each of us &#8211; once again &#8211; is to become an unwitting research subject, an experiment whose results are unpredictable, but which has a realistic chance of producing harm to many of us. DrRich speaks, of course, of the new US dietary guidelines, published earlier this year, regarding sodium.
Those new guidelines begin with these established &#8220;facts:&#8221; Sodium is bad. We all get too much of it. And if we restricted our salt intake to a much lower amount than we are likely getting today, we will all become healthier and live longer. Relying on this received wisdom, the new guidelines call for us to cut back to 2300 mg of sodium per day &#8211; unless we are 51 or older, or African-American, or hypertensive (and most Americans fall into one of these three categories), in which case we are to restrict our sodium to 1500 mg per day.
For anyone who strays from eating only fresh fruits and vegetables, this kind of restriction is likely to prove a challenge. A nice bowl of dry cereal, for instance, even before you add milk, may give you up to 1000 mg of sodium.
Some Americans might consider such severe restrictions to be merely a statement of an ideal &#8211; a goal that, while laudatory, is entirely unreasonable or impracticable, one which we ought not expect to achieve with any degree of perfection, across a large population, in real life. But DrRich assures his readers that this is not at all how the Feds are viewing the matter.
The Institute of Medicine, for instance, is all over it. The IOM recently published (in conjunction with the new Guidelines) its &#8220;Strategies To Reduce Sodium Intake In the US.&#8221; Noting that public health experts have tried in vain for decades to get Americans to cut back on salt, the IOM says the time for persuasion by education has passed. The great unwashed are proved to be recalcitrant, yet again, to reason and science. It&#8217;s time to take the gloves off. So the IOM calls for the US government (specifically, the FDA) to use its regulatory firepower to enforce &#8211; once and for all &#8211; the kind of sodium restriction that the public welfare demands.
Specifically, the IOM calls for the FDA to reclassify &#8220;salt&#8221; from a food ingredient categorized as GRAS (&#8220;generally regarded as safe,&#8221; i.e., items which have been used for millennia in food preparation without regulatory oversight, such as pepper, parsley, or vinegar, and which are accepted as being harmless), to a &#8220;food additive&#8221; (i.e., a substance which is certifiably harmful, and for which strict, enforceable rules must be promulgated regarding its use). Re-classifying salt as a food additive will give the FDA the authority it needs to enforce it[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Can Advance Directives Be Salvaged?</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/can-advance-directives-be-salvaged</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/can-advance-directives-be-salvaged#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Feb 2011 12:29:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[End Of Life Care]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Medical ethics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1292</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: ____ This is the first in a series of articles on End-of-Life Care and Covert Rationing.  The second article can be found here. ____ It is easy to have missed it, because it went by so quickly. On January 1, the White House announced a new policy that would have paid doctors for discussing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>____</p>
<p><em>This is the first in a series of articles on End-of-Life Care and Covert Rationing.  The second article can be found <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/how-to-sell-assisted-suicide" target="_blank">here</a>.<br />
</em></p>
<p><em>____</em></p>
<p>It is easy to have missed it, because it went by so quickly.</p>
<p>On January 1, the White House announced a new policy that would have paid doctors for discussing end-of-life planning during their Medicare patients&#8217; annual &#8220;wellness visit.&#8221; Under this policy, physicians would be paid to encourage their patients to establish an advance directive, which would guide medical care if the patient became incapacitated from illness, and could no longer make medical decisions for him/herself.</p>
<p>But on January 5, the new policy was suddenly revoked. It was revoked, CMS lamely explained, because it had not been implemented using the correct process. But, as anyone would know who watched Congress make Obamacare the law of the land, this could not possibly have been the real reason.</p>
<p>The real reason, of course, has to do with the firestorm this new policy threatened to unleash, just as the House of Representatives was about to be taken over by the cretinous opposition party.</p>
<p>As regular readers will recall, the Obamacare bill originally included similar language on advance directives. Physicians were supposed to urge their patients, repeatedly if necessary, to establish advance directives, and their success in extracting advance directives from their patients was to be one of the &#8220;performance measures&#8221; by which doctors would be judged to be in good or bad standing with the Central Authority.</p>
<p>But then Sarah Palin said &#8220;death panels,&#8221; and a furor ensued. The provision on advance directives was quickly removed from the Obamacare legislation, as if Congress was admitting that Ms. Palin had been correct and they had been caught out.<strong>*</strong> Similarly, the effort last month to reinstate the provision failed to stick for fear of criticism at a bad time.</p>
<p>_____<br />
<strong>*</strong>The original advance directive provision in Obamacare, of course, had nothing whatsoever to do with &#8220;death panels,&#8221; since there are no panels of any sort involved in establishing advance directives. Rather, the entities that some might call death panels, and which DrRich has chosen to call GOD panels (Government Operatives Deliberating) &#8211; that is, panels of distinguished experts that will determine, by means of &#8220;guidelines,&#8221; which patients will get what, when and how &#8211; remain fully operative within Obamacare.<br />
_____</p>
<p>DrRich has nothing against advance directives, and indeed, thinks they are a good idea &#8211; in concept, at least. Advance directives allow patients to establish beforehand, usually by a written document, what kinds of medical treatment they would or would not want should they fall victim to a serious, life-threatening illness that leaves them unable to express their wishes. Advance directives are supposed to work by providing guidance to their physicians, who, in their fiduciary capacity, are charged with acting in the patient&#8217;s best interest.</p>
<p>A well-constructed advance directive allows patients to choose to spare themselves from demeaning, undignified, painful or otherwise undesirable medical procedures and treatments, should they become incapacitated at a later date. &#8220;Well-constructed&#8221; implies that the advance directives are clearly and concisely written, that they honor the ethical and legal norms approved by society, and that they provide the physician with clear guidance.</p>
<p>But it is more difficult to write a &#8220;well-constructed&#8221; advance directive than might at first meet the eye. The major problems are two-fold: Advance directives often express imperfect knowledge, and they are often imperfectly expressed. These limitations mean that in appropriately exercising an advance directive, often the physician cannot follow them to the letter, but must interpret them according to the circumstances at hand.</p>
<p>A healthy and relatively robust individual cannot always know how he or she will feel years into the future, when illness strikes and it is time to exercise an advance directive. Every doctor has seen critically ill patients who, despite having advance directives to the contrary, unhesitatingly choose to be attached to a ventilator when the time comes, for instance, rather than face certain imminent death. So experienced doctors know that advance directives do not always indicate what patients will actually choose to do when the time to make a choice is upon them.</p>
<p>They also know that, while conscious patients have the opportunity to repeal their advance directives, unconscious or incapacitated patients do not.** So, in exercising an advance directive, the conscientious physician interprets that directive in light of many other factors, such as, her personal knowledge of the patient, the opinions of family as to what the patient would want done, and the chances of a long-term recovery if the therapy being considered is used. Then she will negotiate with responsible family members an approach that appears to meet the patient&#8217;s presumed desires.</p>
<p>____<br />
**Conscious patients can repeal their advance directives in theory. DrRich has witnessed actual doctors, however, arguing vociferously against using a medical therapy that a sick patient now desperately wants, because years ago the patient signed an advance directive expressing aversion to that therapy.<br />
____</p>
<p>Therefore the advance directive in many cases is an important part of the decision-making process, but it is not the only part. The appropriate use of an advance directive requires the doctor to behave as a true patient advocate, to selflessly place the desires expressed in the directive in context with everything else that might affect the patient&#8217;s true and current wishes, and then make a recommendation that, to the best of his or her ability, honors those wishes.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, doctors can no longer act primarily as their individual patient&#8217;s advocate. Indeed, physicians are officially enjoined (<a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/drrich-the-acp-and-medical-ethics" target="_blank">by the New Ethics formally adopted by their own professional organizations</a>) to give the needs of society at least equal consideration. And so, <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines" target="_blank">as has demonstrably happened with other &#8220;guidelines&#8221;</a> in medicine, it is inevitable that advance directives will be reduced to a legal edict, which must be followed to the letter if the physician wishes to remain clear of the Department of Justice.</p>
<p>The likelihood that there will be no room for interpretation means that constructing just the right kind of advance directive for yourself &#8211; one that will be precisely suitable to any contingency that may occur &#8211; has become extremely difficult. If you get the details just a little bit wrong for the circumstances that actually arise, the price you pay may be very heavy. It would be better to have no advance directive at all than to have one that is misleading or ambiguous. Advance directives must be written with extreme care, and only after long, thoughtful consideration.</p>
<p>That is not how the government would have it, however. For many years now, the Feds, under the Patient Self-Determination Act, requires hospitals to inform patients about advance directives at the time of every hospital admission, and to invite them to sign one. To say this is a less than ideal time to implement an advance directive would be something of an understatement. Asking a patient to sign an advance directive at the time of hospital admission, often by including it in the pile of routine and mind-numbing legalistic documents which patients must sign if they want to receive medical care, and often with no more guidance than that provided by the admissions clerk (who might explain, &#8220;This tells the doctors you don&#8217;t want to be kept alive on a machine like a vegetable,&#8221;) tells us something about whether the true motive for advance directives is to protect the patient&#8217;s autonomy &#8211; or to reduce costs.</p>
<p>Having the discussion in a doctor&#8217;s office these days, sadly, might not be much better. The Central Authority knows that squeezing what really ought to be at least a 30-minute discussion into a 10-15 minute office visit already packed with Pay for Performance requirements (while providing the added threat of punishment if the physician fails to extract an advance directive from the patient), will yield, at best, a signature on a boiler-plate document.</p>
<p>But despite the slap-dash method by which such a document may be implemented, it is a document whose language &#8211; when the time comes &#8211; will be exercised with all the legalistic exactitude of a contract attorney by any doctor who knows what&#8217;s good for him.</p>
<p>DrRich thinks that Americans are right in being suspicious of the big push they are seeing to urge advance directives upon them. Invoking &#8220;death panels&#8221; in this regard is utterly inappropriate, but the end result will suffice. It is good that we have all been given pause.</p>
<p>Still, the concept of advance directives is a good one, and DrRich thinks most Americans might do well to have one. Despite the damage that is being done to them, DrRich thinks advance directives can be salvaged. To this end, DrRich suggests several steps we can all take in executing an advance directive that will actually do what we want it to do:</p>
<p><strong>1)</strong> Don&#8217;t be pressured into implementing an advance directive by anybody whose career depends on keeping the Central Authority happy. Unfortunately, this likely includes your doctor if you are not paying your doctor yourself.</p>
<p><strong>2)</strong> Don&#8217;t sign a boiler-plate document. These likely will have been drafted with the interests of the Central Authority in mind, with the help of very smart lawyers, and when these documents are called into use in all probability they will be interpreted for the convenience of the Central Authority.</p>
<p><strong>3) </strong>Try to keep your advance directive from showing up in an electronic medical record. Write it yourself, and store it where your loved ones can find it when they need it. Give a copy to your spouse, your children, and perhaps (if you have a direct-pay doctor who works only for you) your physician. This way, since your advance directive will not be immediately available to hospital personnel if you are suddenly incapacitated, no unfortunate and irreversible decisions regarding the aggressiveness of your medical care can be made until your loved ones are notified.</p>
<p><strong>4) </strong>Write your advance directive as a general guideline, with as few specifics regarding particular types of medical care as possible. You should assume that any type of treatment you mention in a negative light will be withheld under any and all circumstances, including circumstances you may not be aware of in which you would want that treatment.</p>
<p><strong>5)</strong> You are not writing your advance directive for the doctors (it is most tragic that we can no longer trust doctors in this regard!); you are writing it to help your loved ones make the right decisions for you, perhaps despite the doctors. So your goal should be to clarify your general desires for your loved ones. Discuss your advance directive with your loved ones after you have written it, and ideally, before you have written it. Your written words will remind them of your wishes when the time is right.</p>
<p>Lest you think, Dear Reader, that  DrRich is merely being sarcastic  here (and why would anyone think so?), he is not. DrRich himself has an advanced directive that attempts to follow these rules. The document is stored at home with his important papers. Mrs. DrRich knows where to find it, and knows DrRich&#8217;s general feelings regarding these matters. With the guidance he has provided, DrRich trusts her and his children to make these important decisions for him. For anyone who is interested, DrRich&#8217;s advance directive is reproduced, in its entirety, at the end of this post. (The general language, which has been adapted and revised by DrRich for his own use, was originally suggested to him by a good friend who is a superb internal medicine practitioner.)</p>
<p>So. Advance directives are a very good idea, but unfortunately, have been identified by the Central Authority as a potentially powerful cost-cutting tool. Even before Obamacare, certain HMOs were refusing to reimburse hospitals or doctors that provided medical care that seemed to go against specific language contained in an advance directive. That, of course, was child&#8217;s play. Now that the Central Authority has gotten hold of them, advance directives will likely be treated the same way as other guidelines are now treated in medicine, that is, as edicts, and thus as <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">vehicles for the criminal prosecution</a> of medical personnel who deign to &#8220;interpret&#8221; them.</p>
<p>This means that if you wish to take advantage of the benefits which advance directives can provide, you will have to proceed very, very carefully.</p>
<p>____</p>
<p><strong>DrRich&#8217;s Advance Directive:</strong></p>
<p><em>If I am able to communicate my wishes by any means whatsoever, then I wish to make my own decisions regarding my own healthcare. If, despite my ability to communicate, my condition makes it inconvenient to fully inform me of my situation and all my treatment options, then until such time as it becomes sufficiently convenient to do so, I want everything possible to be done to sustain my life and effect a recovery.</em></p>
<p><em>In the event of an incapacitating illness in which I cannot communicate, the basic guideline initially should be to do everything possible to sustain my life and effect a recovery.</em></p>
<p><em>After a reasonable period of time (in general, I would consider a week to be reasonable) if no progress has been made in the recovery of my mental function, and the likelihood of mental recovery is judged to be small, then withdrawal of life-sustaining care should be strongly considered. To help my wife and/or children with this decision, I would like to have an evaluation by a neurologist to help clarify the prognosis.</em></p>
<p><em>If improvement in my mental status has been made, then efforts to sustain my life and affect a recovery should be continued.</em></p>
<p><em>If at any point in my care there is a period of at least two weeks in which I am persistently unable to carry out meaningful communications sufficient to make my own wishes known (in the opinion of my family members and the neurologist), and the likelihood of mental recovery is judged to be small, then I would consider the withdrawal of life-sustaining care to be a blessing.</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>10</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1292/0/advance-directives.mp3" length="16823275" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:17:31</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

____
This is the first in a series of articles on End-of-Life Care and Covert Rationing.  The second article can be found here.

____
It is easy to have missed it, because it went by so quickly.
On January 1, the White House announced a ne[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

____
This is the first in a series of articles on End-of-Life Care and Covert Rationing.  The second article can be found here.

____
It is easy to have missed it, because it went by so quickly.
On January 1, the White House announced a new policy that would have paid doctors for discussing end-of-life planning during their Medicare patients&#8217; annual &#8220;wellness visit.&#8221; Under this policy, physicians would be paid to encourage their patients to establish an advance directive, which would guide medical care if the patient became incapacitated from illness, and could no longer make medical decisions for him/herself.
But on January 5, the new policy was suddenly revoked. It was revoked, CMS lamely explained, because it had not been implemented using the correct process. But, as anyone would know who watched Congress make Obamacare the law of the land, this could not possibly have been the real reason.
The real reason, of course, has to do with the firestorm this new policy threatened to unleash, just as the House of Representatives was about to be taken over by the cretinous opposition party.
As regular readers will recall, the Obamacare bill originally included similar language on advance directives. Physicians were supposed to urge their patients, repeatedly if necessary, to establish advance directives, and their success in extracting advance directives from their patients was to be one of the &#8220;performance measures&#8221; by which doctors would be judged to be in good or bad standing with the Central Authority.
But then Sarah Palin said &#8220;death panels,&#8221; and a furor ensued. The provision on advance directives was quickly removed from the Obamacare legislation, as if Congress was admitting that Ms. Palin had been correct and they had been caught out.* Similarly, the effort last month to reinstate the provision failed to stick for fear of criticism at a bad time.
_____
*The original advance directive provision in Obamacare, of course, had nothing whatsoever to do with &#8220;death panels,&#8221; since there are no panels of any sort involved in establishing advance directives. Rather, the entities that some might call death panels, and which DrRich has chosen to call GOD panels (Government Operatives Deliberating) &#8211; that is, panels of distinguished experts that will determine, by means of &#8220;guidelines,&#8221; which patients will get what, when and how &#8211; remain fully operative within Obamacare.
_____
DrRich has nothing against advance directives, and indeed, thinks they are a good idea &#8211; in concept, at least. Advance directives allow patients to establish beforehand, usually by a written document, what kinds of medical treatment they would or would not want should they fall victim to a serious, life-threatening illness that leaves them unable to express their wishes. Advance directives are supposed to work by providing guidance to their physicians, who, in their fiduciary capacity, are charged with acting in the patient&#8217;s best interest.
A well-constructed advance directive allows patients to choose to spare themselves from demeaning, undignified, painful or otherwise undesirable medical procedures and treatments, should they become incapacitated at a later date. &#8220;Well-constructed&#8221; implies that the advance directives are clearly and concisely written, that they honor the ethical and legal norms approved by society, and that they provide the physician with clear guidance.
But it is more difficult to write a &#8220;well-constructed&#8221; advance directive than might at first meet the eye. The major problems are two-fold: Advance directives often express imperfect knowledge, and they are often imperfectly expressed. These limitations mean that in appropriately exercising an advance directive, often the physician cannot follow them to the letter, but must interpret them according to the circumstances at hand.
A healthy and relatively robust individu[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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		<title>From Medical Miracle to Abomination</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/rebuilding/from-medical-miracle-to-abomination</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/rebuilding/from-medical-miracle-to-abomination#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 2011 15:43:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Rebuilding]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1314</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), an incredible feat of visionary medical science blended with cutting edge engineering, a device responsible for saving thousands of lives a year, has gone from being a prototypical American success story to a symbol of healthcare excess. Today the ICD is widely castigated by the press, the public, the insurers, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), an incredible feat of visionary medical science blended with cutting edge engineering, a device responsible for saving thousands of lives a year, has gone from being a prototypical American success story to a symbol of healthcare excess. Today the ICD is widely castigated by the press, the public, the insurers, the government, and even most doctors as the poster child for expensive and wasteful medical technology. Consequently, the ICD and the doctors who implant them have become fair game for whatever the Central Authority wishes to throw at them. DrRich has explored this fascinating phenomenon in this series of articles;</p>
<p><a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines" target="_blank">How ICD Implantation Guidelines Are Being Abused</a></p>
<p><a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">The DOJ Investigation of ICD Implanters, and What It Means</a></p>
<p><a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/how-the-implantable-defibrillator-became-an-abomination" target="_blank">How the ICD Became an Abomination</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What Should Electrophysiologists Make Of The DOJ Investigation?</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Jan 2011 16:32:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cardiology Topics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1273</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: Two weeks ago DrRich wrote about the abuse of implantable defibrillator guidelines, as illustrated by a recent JAMA article claiming that over 22% of ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) implantations are &#8220;non-evidence based.&#8221; The abuse of the guidelines, DrRich showed, was perpetrated less by ICD implanters, and more by the authors of that article. That [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>Two weeks ago DrRich wrote about <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines" target="_blank">the abuse of implantable defibrillator guidelines</a>, as illustrated by a recent JAMA article claiming that over 22% of ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) implantations are &#8220;non-evidence based.&#8221; The abuse of the guidelines, DrRich showed, was perpetrated less by ICD implanters, and more by the authors of that article. That fact being interesting but irrelevant, DrRich went on to speculate that perhaps the Feds would rouse themselves to take this issue to the next level.</p>
<p>It certainly did not take long. Indeed, just a days after DrRich&#8217;s post (which ought to completely absolve him of having any direct impact on the Feds&#8217; action), it was revealed that the Department of Justice had already launched an investigation of ICD implants, as related to &#8220;proper guidelines for clinical decision making.&#8221;</p>
<p>This revelation was made on the website of the Heart Rhythm Society, the professional organization of electrophysiologists (EPs). HRS went on to say that it (HRS itself) had &#8220;agreed&#8221; to assist the DOJ in an advisory role in its investigation. Furthermore: &#8220;Because this is an ongoing investigation, HRS Staff or Leadership is not available for further comment. HRS will communicate additional information to its membership <em>when permitted to do so by the DOJ</em>.&#8221; (Emphasis DrRich&#8217;s.)</p>
<p>So here&#8217;s what we know:</p>
<p>1) The DOJ is actively investigating ICD implantations.<br />
2) Their investigation has to do with the &#8220;proper use of guidelines&#8221; in selecting patients for ICDs.<br />
3) HRS, the professional organization to which EPs pay huge dues each year in order that it might represent their interests, most especially their interests in Washington, has been preemptively co-opted by the Feds, and indeed has been gagged, so that any further communication to its own membership regarding the investigation is forbidden until further notice.</p>
<p>What will HRS tell the DOJ? It hardly matters, since the important thing has already been accomplished, i.e., effectively silencing the sole organization which represents the interests of EPs in Washington. But, while the HRS statement indicates that the organization is &#8220;assisting&#8221; the DOJ with &#8220;information that does not include either identifiable patient or facility level data,&#8221; and while DrRich has no doubt that this is the sincere intent of HRS, DrRich also believes it to be a sure thing that, at the end of the day, HRS (if it wishes immunity from any liability it might find itself subject to, regarding the advice, statements, educational materials, &amp;c., it might have produced over the years, relating to clinical guidelines, or to any other matter of interest that might surface during the DOJ&#8217;s open-ended investigation), will tell the DOJ Anything It Wants To Know.</p>
<p>DrRich&#8217;s fellow bloggers who are also electrophysiolgists, <a href="http://drwes.blogspot.com/2011/01/doj-investigating-defibrillator.html" target="_blank">Wes Fisher</a> and <a href="http://www.drjohnm.org/2011/01/a-rough-day-in-heart-rhythm-news/" target="_blank">John Mandrola</a>, quickly noted the HRS statement on their respective blogs, and each expressed a certain amount of concern as to the implications of the DOJ&#8217;s investigation. But Larry Husten, who writes the excellent<a href="http://cardiobrief.org/2011/01/21/heart-rhythm-society-advising-doj-in-investigation-of-icd-implants/" target="_blank"> Cardiobrief blog</a>, offers a calming voice: &#8220;I doubt that the DOJ is gearing up to tackle the vast majority of “reasonable” off-guideline implants. I think they will be going for the real outliers, and when and if they reveal the details of their case there will be little sympathy for their targets.&#8221;</p>
<p>Some of DrRich&#8217;s readers, who not inappropriately consider him to be a bit paranoid about the Central Authority, may find it surprising that, fundamentally, he agrees with Larry on this matter. He does not think the DOJ will round up large numbers (or even moderate numbers) of EPs who have been practicing basically sound electrophysiology, and who likely have reasonable explanations for any off-guideline ICD implantations they may have committed. DrRich agrees that the DOJ instead will go after a few outliers, figures who &#8211; very specifically &#8211; will garner little sympathy amongst the public, and indeed, who can be held out, with good effect, for public castigation. Preferably, these figures will be individuals about whom the marketing departments of one ICD manufacturer or another will have generated a few embarrassingly glowing e-mails, celebrating the sheer number of sales these doctors have produced, and discussing strategies &#8211; offering speaking engagements in exotic locations, putting on pig roasts, &amp;c. &#8211; to keep the ball rolling.</p>
<p>In other words, it is likely at the end of the day the DOJ will produce a few doctors who are truly abusing the system, and harming patients to boot, and who will actually deserve what they will get.</p>
<p>There is no guarantee about this, of course. <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/uncategorized/how-drrich-became-radicalized" target="_blank">DrRich has written abou</a>t how he himself, in his pristine innocence, was once the target of a federal investigation of ICD implants. And while he had on his side the virtues of good medical practice, truth, justice, the American Way, ethics, and even the law, and while he eventually was extricated from his situation with an entirely clean record, it was a close thing, and his escape was based more on luck than on being right. More recently, when DrRich had the &#8220;opportunity&#8221; to testify under oath in a DOJ investigation on another matter (which he is not yet at liberty to discuss, but regarding which, happily, he was only a witness this time, and not a target), DrRich was required by the DOJ to answer several questions about this very blog and its content, which (as far as DrRich could tell) had nothing whatsoever to do with the matter at hand. By this means DrRich was led to know that the Feds are either among his very great fans (Hi, Fellas!) &#8211; or something else.</p>
<p>DrRich&#8217;s paranoia, you see, is hard-won, not to mention evidence-based.</p>
<p>So it is indeed possible for innocents to get drawn into such matters &#8211; collateral damage is always unavoidable when one is at war &#8211; but odds are it won&#8217;t be You, or You, or You, so like Larry says, not to worry. They are looking for true evil-doers.</p>
<p>DrRich also agrees with Larry that this DOJ investigation is not a direct response to the JAMA article. The JAMA article appeared a mere week or two before HRS made its announcement &#8211; and its announcement obviously was so carefully lawyered-up that it must have taken weeks if not months to negotiate just that one detail with the DOJ. This has all been in the works for a while.  But DrRich does not believe for a moment that the DOJ was unaware that the JAMA article was coming out, or that its content, and the subsequent media attention it would create regarding the widespread ICD abuses being perpetrated by EPs, would dovetail nicely with the subsequent revelation by HRS of the DOJ investigation.</p>
<p>ICDs, and their implanters, have long been a target of the payers &#8211; both government payers and insurers &#8211; and this new enterprise is merely the latest battle in a long war.</p>
<p>As it happens, DrRich spoke at a certain investigators&#8217; meeting just this past weekend, which was attended by a score or so of prominent electrophysiologists. He can report that the JAMA article (which defined off-guideline ICD usage as bad medicine and harmful to patients), followed by the intense publicity in the media this article generated (also emphasizing bad medicine and harm to patients), followed by the DOJ investigation related to the &#8220;proper use of guidelines&#8221; in ICD implantation, followed by the co-opting and the gagging of the EPs&#8217; own professional organization, is having a delightfully chilling effect on the profession. DrRich thinks it is unlikely that very many off-guideline ICD implants will be performed for the foreseeable future, no matter how much individual patients might benefit from them, at least while this investigation continues. In fact, while the investigation is ongoing, DrRich suspects that even referrals to EPs for ICD implants will drop off. Because, until then, it will remain an open question just how rigorously one must stick to the letter of the guidelines in order for the DOJ to give one a pass, and to not be considered as guilty of crimes against humanity. The profession is duly intimidated.</p>
<p>Whatever the final outcome of this investigation, it has has already had its intended effect.  DrRich respectfully suggests that the DOJ might just as well take its time with it, and let the effect percolate to perfection.</p>
<p>______</p>
<p><em>Note: Further evidence came this afternoon (January 24) that the effect the Central Authority had in mind is being realized, when Wells Fargo Securities downgraded St. Jude Medical from Outperform to Market Perform. The downgrade was based on WFS&#8217; assessment that ICD implants will be reduced by 10% in 2011, thanks to the DOJ investigation. That reduction doesn&#8217;t quite do it, of course, but it&#8217;s a start.</em></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1273/0/DOJ-investigation-EP.mp3" length="11134432" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:11:36</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

Two weeks ago DrRich wrote about the abuse of implantable defibrillator guidelines, as illustrated by a recent JAMA article claiming that over 22% of ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) implantations are &#8220;non-evidence based.[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

Two weeks ago DrRich wrote about the abuse of implantable defibrillator guidelines, as illustrated by a recent JAMA article claiming that over 22% of ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator) implantations are &#8220;non-evidence based.&#8221; The abuse of the guidelines, DrRich showed, was perpetrated less by ICD implanters, and more by the authors of that article. That fact being interesting but irrelevant, DrRich went on to speculate that perhaps the Feds would rouse themselves to take this issue to the next level.
It certainly did not take long. Indeed, just a days after DrRich&#8217;s post (which ought to completely absolve him of having any direct impact on the Feds&#8217; action), it was revealed that the Department of Justice had already launched an investigation of ICD implants, as related to &#8220;proper guidelines for clinical decision making.&#8221;
This revelation was made on the website of the Heart Rhythm Society, the professional organization of electrophysiologists (EPs). HRS went on to say that it (HRS itself) had &#8220;agreed&#8221; to assist the DOJ in an advisory role in its investigation. Furthermore: &#8220;Because this is an ongoing investigation, HRS Staff or Leadership is not available for further comment. HRS will communicate additional information to its membership when permitted to do so by the DOJ.&#8221; (Emphasis DrRich&#8217;s.)
So here&#8217;s what we know:
1) The DOJ is actively investigating ICD implantations.
2) Their investigation has to do with the &#8220;proper use of guidelines&#8221; in selecting patients for ICDs.
3) HRS, the professional organization to which EPs pay huge dues each year in order that it might represent their interests, most especially their interests in Washington, has been preemptively co-opted by the Feds, and indeed has been gagged, so that any further communication to its own membership regarding the investigation is forbidden until further notice.
What will HRS tell the DOJ? It hardly matters, since the important thing has already been accomplished, i.e., effectively silencing the sole organization which represents the interests of EPs in Washington. But, while the HRS statement indicates that the organization is &#8220;assisting&#8221; the DOJ with &#8220;information that does not include either identifiable patient or facility level data,&#8221; and while DrRich has no doubt that this is the sincere intent of HRS, DrRich also believes it to be a sure thing that, at the end of the day, HRS (if it wishes immunity from any liability it might find itself subject to, regarding the advice, statements, educational materials, &#38;c., it might have produced over the years, relating to clinical guidelines, or to any other matter of interest that might surface during the DOJ&#8217;s open-ended investigation), will tell the DOJ Anything It Wants To Know.
DrRich&#8217;s fellow bloggers who are also electrophysiolgists, Wes Fisher and John Mandrola, quickly noted the HRS statement on their respective blogs, and each expressed a certain amount of concern as to the implications of the DOJ&#8217;s investigation. But Larry Husten, who writes the excellent Cardiobrief blog, offers a calming voice: &#8220;I doubt that the DOJ is gearing up to tackle the vast majority of “reasonable” off-guideline implants. I think they will be going for the real outliers, and when and if they reveal the details of their case there will be little sympathy for their targets.&#8221;
Some of DrRich&#8217;s readers, who not inappropriately consider him to be a bit paranoid about the Central Authority, may find it surprising that, fundamentally, he agrees with Larry on this matter. He does not think the DOJ will round up large numbers (or even moderate numbers) of EPs who have been practicing basically sound electrophysiology, and who likely have reasonable explanations for any off-guideline ICD implantations they may have committed. DrRich agrees that the DOJ instead will go after[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
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		<title>Who Writes Those Clinical Guidelines, Anyway?</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/fun-with-guidelines/who-writes-those-clinical-guidelines-anyway</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/fun-with-guidelines/who-writes-those-clinical-guidelines-anyway#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jan 2011 13:50:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fun with guidelines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1252</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: While DrRich is a conservative American, and has made plain the difficulties he has with the Progressive program in general and with Progressive healthcare reform in particular, at times he is forced to admit that, on occasion, the Progressive way of looking at the world has certain merits. And as DrRich contemplates a question [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Podcast:</p>
<p></p>
<p>While DrRich is a conservative American, and has made plain the difficulties he has with the <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/drrichs-theory-of-progressive-thought" target="_blank">Progressive program in general</a> and with Progressive healthcare reform in particular, at times he is forced to admit that, on occasion, the Progressive way of looking at the world has certain merits. And as DrRich contemplates a question that has been bothering him lately, a question that no doubt plagues many American physicians who (unlike DrRich) are still toiling away in the trenches, he finds that this is one such occasion.</p>
<p>That question is: Just who are the people writing all those clinical guidelines &#8211; the  &#8220;guidelines&#8221; physicians are now expected to follow <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines" target="_blank">in every particular in every case</a>, on pain of massive fines, loss of career, and/or incarceration?</p>
<p>DrRich is quick to say that the act of creating clinical guidelines is not inherently evil, and indeed, back in the day when guidelines were merely guidelines (instead of edicts or directives that must be obeyed to the last letter), creating clinical guidelines was a rather noble thing to do.</p>
<p>But today, we have physicians clamoring to become GOD panelists (Government Operatives Deliberating). These aristocrats of medicine will render the rules by which their more inferior fellow physicians, the ones who have actual contact with patients, will live or die. Clearly positions of such authority will be very desirable, and so, as one might predict, they are being vigorously pursued. And we are seeing candidates audition for these panels with efforts ranging from amateurish to ruthless. It puts one in mind of the early-season contestants on &#8220;American Idol.&#8221;</p>
<p>We see them <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/patients-doctors-and-remote-third-parties" target="_blank">vociferously extolling</a>, in every public venue they can find, the idea of &#8220;fly by wire&#8221; medicine, whereby every decision physicians make will be determined not at the bedside but by the best and the brightest experts, acting at a distance. The experts will distribute rules of action based on only the best scientific evidence (&#8220;best&#8221; being determined by those selfsame experts). The directives they hand down will be models of actionable simplicity,spelled out so unambiguously that even doctors born, raised, and trained in the Midwest or the South will be able to follow them.  (And if the doctors refuse to cooperate sufficiently, non-physician medical professionals will be able to do the job.) We see them writing scientific papers that <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/more-arguments-for-withholding-crestor" target="_blank">spin the evidence</a> in such a way as to generate conclusions which will be soothing to the Central Authority. We see them <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/why-theyre-trashing-the-jupiter-trial" target="_blank">editing medical journals</a> in order to make certain that the correct conclusions are published, and the incorrect ones are not. We see them taking control of professional organizations, and using their positions to promulgate <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/progressive-medical-ethics" target="_blank">changes in medical ethics</a> that advance the<a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-reform/pcps-we-are-the-borg-prepare-to-be-assimilated" target="_blank"> Borg-ification</a> of medicine, and to formally endorse Obamacare on behalf of American physicians who, for the most part, were against doing so.</p>
<p>These people have gained great prominence within our healthcare system, and practicing physicians will be dealing with them and the consequences of their actions for many years to come. While the natural impulse of us typical American doctors may be to simply marvel at the wonder of it all, shake our heads resignedly, and go about our increasingly distressing business, it may behoove us to take a closer look at these individuals, to attempt to understand them a little better. After all, their activities in the near future promise to greatly impact our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.</p>
<p>So &#8211; who are they, anyway?</p>
<p>This, dear reader, is where the Progressive mode of thought comes in handy. DrRich refers, of course, to the Progressive doctrine of Diversity.</p>
<p>Diversity, for those who pretend not to know, is perhaps the chief mechanism by which Progressives attempt to control the behavior of the population.<strong> </strong></p>
<p><a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/progressive-medical-ethics" target="_blank">Recall</a> that the Progressive program is to create the perfect society. The  Progressive elite know just how to do this, of course, but individuals  within every population throughout human history have insisted upon  acting in their own self-interest, which is counterproductive to the  collective goal. In past efforts to perfect human societies, such  individual recalcitrance has been dealt with by means of concentration  camps and pogroms and the like. &#8220;Diversity,&#8221; we all should admit, is a much  kinder and gentler approach to curing the problem of individualism.</p>
<p>Specifically, the doctrine of Diversity defines the range of permissible behaviors and thoughts for a given group of people within a society. The numerous celebrations of Diversity we see all around us invariably  turn out to be strategies to reinforce those allowable ranges of thought  and behavior. In this way, members of a particular group who begin behaving and thinking outside the allowable range can be quickly identified and dealt with, either through correction (which brings them back into the group), or through vilification (which marginalizes them). It is easy to become confused about this, since classically &#8220;diversity&#8221; means something other than &#8220;conformity.&#8221;  (As a general rule, if you want to know what Progressives are really up to, listen to what they say and then look to see if their deeds are actually working toward the opposite thing.  DrRich thinks that much of the time you will find that they are.)</p>
<p>In any case, while in general DrRich does not approve of Diversity as it is being practiced today, he finds that the concept might be useful in attempting to answer the question at hand.</p>
<p>Specifically, DrRich refers to his theory that physicians (like any humans) tend to end up in careers that best suit their underlying personalities and proclivities, and so physicians in a given specialty will tend to think and behave like other physicians within that specialty, and unlike physicians in other specialties. If this theory has any merit (and let us call it the Diversity Theory of Physicians), it will allow us to make some generalizations about the characteristics of individuals who have chosen specific kinds of medical careers. DrRich stresses that he is aiming to make generalizations only, and while those generalizations might help enlighten us to a modest degree regarding, say, what sort of physician will end up on the GOD panels, they can tell us nothing about particular individuals.</p>
<p>With that annoying disclaimer out of the way, let us examine some ways in which the DTP reveals Truth. An obvious example is the specialty of psychiatry, which tends to attract doctors who are, perhaps subliminally, concerned that they are just a little crazy themselves. As it happens, it often turns out they are correct. In DrRich&#8217;s experience, and in the experience of just about anyone who has encountered more than a handful of shrinks, these fine physicians, on average, display an astonishing degree of off-the-wall psychopathology. (Not that there&#8217;s anything wrong with that.)</p>
<p>Emergency room doctors have short attention spans and are afraid of commitment.</p>
<p>Endocrinologists get their jollies by sitting alone in cramped offices, parsing tremendous volumes of laboratory data from blood tests, which they claim reflect moment-to-moment variations in hormone levels, and from this arcane evidence are able to parse out (so they say) subtle glandular difficulties. If endocrinologists were not physicians they would be accountants; the more aggressive endocrinologists (who are identifiable by the dirty glance they give you if you happen to interrupt their lonely cogitations) might be forensic accountants. (How anybody could specialize in any organ that just sits there, perhaps secreting various invisible substances, but otherwise not doing anything whatsoever,  DrRich will never understand.)</p>
<p>Orthopedic surgeons are former jocks, or wish they were, and the ones who end up replacing hips in old ladies instead of patrolling the sidelines at college football games are often very frustrated individuals.</p>
<p>Party animals who manage to gain entrance to medical school often end up as anesthesiologists.</p>
<p>Cardiologists like to envision themselves (and would like others to envision them) as living on the edge. After all, they put catheters into damaged coronary arteries in patients on the brink of heart attacks, and, through their skillful manipulations, open those arteries and save lives. They are the extreme sportsmen of medicine, so they believe. But really, their jobs are ones of relative security, predictability and instant gratification. What they do in the cath lab actually is pretty rote, and it provides them with immediate, concrete results. They can even show the &#8220;before&#8221; and &#8220;after&#8221; pictures to the person they just saved, who will then heap praise and shed tears of gratitude upon them. But any time fixing a particular artery looks a little too risky, they call a cardiac surgeon right away. This pattern of behavior suggests to DrRich that their aggressive personnas and glory-seeking activities are actually masking an underlying insecurity.</p>
<p>It would not be fair of DrRich to psychoanalyze all these other specialists &#8211; who have done nothing to provoke him &#8211; without also doing the same for electrophysiologists. All electrophysiologists started out as cardiologists, of course, so they have that going for them. But to really understand electrophysiologists, one must invoke the principle of sublimation. To sublimate is to channel an underlying negative tendency to some activity that partially gratifies that tendency, but that is considered worthwhile by society. So, for instance, people with a tendency toward pyromania may become volunteer firefighters. People with sadistic tendencies may become prison guards. Foot fetishists can become shoe salesmen. Compulsive liars can become novelists.</p>
<p>Who, then, become electrophysiologists?</p>
<p>Back in the 1980s and 1990s, when DrRich was practicing, what electrophysiologists mainly did was to try to prevent sudden death in patients who had a high risk of dying suddenly from cardiac arrhythmias. And in order to find the optimal therapy for these patients, it was necessary to induce, intentionally and repeatedly, cardiac arrests under controlled conditions. This was done in an effort to find an antiarrhythmic drug that would prevent the induction of cardiac arrest. This behavior we euphemistically called &#8220;serial drug testing.&#8221;  Fortunately, this procedure is no longer necessary, since the implantable defibrillator has been perfected and is now widely available for high-risk patients (if you can get it paid for).</p>
<p>While it has been widely remarked that those early-day electrophysiologists were a very strange group indeed, most of us who did this serial drug testing ended up successfully absorbed into normal society, and today (as far as DrRich can tell) we are for the most part generally pretty harmless. But DrRich sometimes finds himself wondering what might have become of some of us (some in particular more than others) if we had not had this remarkable opportunity to sublimate what one might speculate to be some rather unpleasant tendencies. And what is to become of that young person today who has whatever those unfortunate tendencies might be, and who, 30 years ago, might have found release as an electrophysiologist? One must not think too deeply about this.</p>
<p>Let us now turn our attention to those would-be GOD panelists, and see if we can decipher what kind of people these might be. Admitting that what follows &#8211; and, for that matter, what has just been said &#8211; amounts only to an educated guess, DrRich submits that the GOD panelists are people you already know well, if you have worked within the American healthcare system.</p>
<p>These are the kids you knew in college who studied all the time and got straight A&#8217;s in all the hardest courses, buttered up their teachers, then aced their MCATs. For them the hardest part about applying to medical school was in deciding which of the many schools that accepted them they should attend. Likely, they chose one of the Ivy League ones. Their first two years of medical school &#8211; the didactic years &#8211; were much like their college experiences. They studied hard, aced all the exams, and were generally acknowledged by both faculty and peers to be at the very top of their class.</p>
<p>Then they reached their clinical years, and things changed. They still knew more information than anyone else, and in fact their information base continued to expand. They read all the journals, and could always quote new research findings chapter and verse. They could conjugate the Krebs cycle on demand (or whatever it is you do with the Krebs cycle), and could recite precisely which enzyme that new drug inhibited, and could say why doing so made it OK to eat pizza again.</p>
<p>But what they could not do was be a good doctor. They had no instinct for it; no ability to get the patients to tell them the important information; no ability to read a patient&#8217;s facial expression, or phraseology, or body language, those signs that reveal the real truth. They had no ability to discern useful information from the flood of partial and contradictory clinical evidence that is always pouring in from several sources. When time was of the essence, they had no capacity to figure out what was going on or what they should do about it. They could not adjust to changing clinical situations on the fly. In an emergency they were paralyzed, trying to match the quickly evolving situation in front of them with the static words on the printed page. And often they were klutzes.</p>
<p>They were perfectly cut out to learn medicine, but lousy at actually doing it. What was worse, some of their colleagues who were mediocre in the book-learning department suddenly blossomed into highly competent clinicians on the wards, and quickly became recognized as rising stars by attending physicians, while they themselves were repeatedly chastised, or ignored.</p>
<p>And it just wasn&#8217;t right. It just wasn&#8217;t fair. They had worked harder than everyone else, had twice the brains as those others, and had learned the material three times as well. But the way God set it up, they just weren&#8217;t good doctors.</p>
<p>Many of these unfortunate souls quickly left clinical medicine, and branched off into research, academics, or administration. Most of them did quite well for themselves, because they really are very smart. But they never really got over their frustration and anger over their unjust  failures on the clinical wards, a place where their obvious inferiors lorded it over them. They have now spent years engaging in cognitive dissonance, convincing themselves that their apparent failure was an illusion, merely a sign of having been subjected to the anti-intellectual, shoot-from-the-hip, do-it-quickly-and-make-more-money environment that is American healthcare. After all, how could they be sub-optimal physicians when they are clearly far more intelligent and knowledgeable than the supposed &#8220;stars?&#8221; If the healthcare system had been arranged differently, in such a way as to make the cowboys behave the right way, they would have proven themselves to be the best clinicians in the land.  It is a bitter, bitter pill.</p>
<p>These are the guys, DrRich thinks, who are chomping at the bit for the opportunity to sit on the GOD panels. They would dearly love the chance to utilize their superior intellectual firepower, to distill the clinical research data, to digest it painstakingly and thoroughly (not haphazardly and on the fly like those others), to put down on paper the RIGHT way of practicing clinical medicine -  and to have the authority to do it in such a way (backed up by the full force of the Central Authority) that those lesser doctors will HAVE to do it their way, at long last.</p>
<p>The point of all this psychoanalytic guesswork is to suggest that the GOD panelists, even the GOD panelists who are physicians, will have no sympathy for the idea that the practice of medicine should be individualized to any degree whatsoever. The idea of individualizing medical care, rather than practicing by formula from a book, is what caused these people the most uncomfortable moments in their professional lives. Far from being sympathetic to the idea, they will probably be more hostile to it than the non-physicians on the GOD panels. When somebody on the panel suggests that, perhaps, we should give the doctor a little more leeway on this particular issue, these physicians will speak up and say, &#8220;Listen. I&#8217;ve been there and you haven&#8217;t. These doctors don&#8217;t need any more rope, unless it&#8217;s to bind them even tighter.&#8221; They were themselves shown no quarter, in the tough arena of clinical medicine where outcomes (and not process or book knowledge) is the only mark of success, and they will offer none in their turn.</p>
<p>DrRich cannot prove any of this, of course. He is just theorizing, based on his own personal observations and prejudices, having observed many of these whiz-kids in his 25 years of teaching medical trainees, and watching where they wound up. He could, of course, be wrong.</p>
<p>In any case, for allowing him to carry on in this manner DrRich owes one more expression of gratitude to his Progressive friends, whose doctrine of Diversity supplies the necessary substrate, and the ethical &#8220;cover,&#8221; for mercilessly stereotyping selected groups of what otherwise might turn out to be individuals.</p>
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		<slash:comments>5</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1252/0/who-writes-clinical-guidelines.mp3" length="19517440" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:20:20</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

While DrRich is a conservative American, and has made plain the difficulties he has with the Progressive program in general and with Progressive healthcare reform in particular, at times he is forced to admit that, on occasion, the Progres[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

While DrRich is a conservative American, and has made plain the difficulties he has with the Progressive program in general and with Progressive healthcare reform in particular, at times he is forced to admit that, on occasion, the Progressive way of looking at the world has certain merits. And as DrRich contemplates a question that has been bothering him lately, a question that no doubt plagues many American physicians who (unlike DrRich) are still toiling away in the trenches, he finds that this is one such occasion.
That question is: Just who are the people writing all those clinical guidelines &#8211; the  &#8220;guidelines&#8221; physicians are now expected to follow in every particular in every case, on pain of massive fines, loss of career, and/or incarceration?
DrRich is quick to say that the act of creating clinical guidelines is not inherently evil, and indeed, back in the day when guidelines were merely guidelines (instead of edicts or directives that must be obeyed to the last letter), creating clinical guidelines was a rather noble thing to do.
But today, we have physicians clamoring to become GOD panelists (Government Operatives Deliberating). These aristocrats of medicine will render the rules by which their more inferior fellow physicians, the ones who have actual contact with patients, will live or die. Clearly positions of such authority will be very desirable, and so, as one might predict, they are being vigorously pursued. And we are seeing candidates audition for these panels with efforts ranging from amateurish to ruthless. It puts one in mind of the early-season contestants on &#8220;American Idol.&#8221;
We see them vociferously extolling, in every public venue they can find, the idea of &#8220;fly by wire&#8221; medicine, whereby every decision physicians make will be determined not at the bedside but by the best and the brightest experts, acting at a distance. The experts will distribute rules of action based on only the best scientific evidence (&#8220;best&#8221; being determined by those selfsame experts). The directives they hand down will be models of actionable simplicity,spelled out so unambiguously that even doctors born, raised, and trained in the Midwest or the South will be able to follow them.  (And if the doctors refuse to cooperate sufficiently, non-physician medical professionals will be able to do the job.) We see them writing scientific papers that spin the evidence in such a way as to generate conclusions which will be soothing to the Central Authority. We see them editing medical journals in order to make certain that the correct conclusions are published, and the incorrect ones are not. We see them taking control of professional organizations, and using their positions to promulgate changes in medical ethics that advance the Borg-ification of medicine, and to formally endorse Obamacare on behalf of American physicians who, for the most part, were against doing so.
These people have gained great prominence within our healthcare system, and practicing physicians will be dealing with them and the consequences of their actions for many years to come. While the natural impulse of us typical American doctors may be to simply marvel at the wonder of it all, shake our heads resignedly, and go about our increasingly distressing business, it may behoove us to take a closer look at these individuals, to attempt to understand them a little better. After all, their activities in the near future promise to greatly impact our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.
So &#8211; who are they, anyway?
This, dear reader, is where the Progressive mode of thought comes in handy. DrRich refers, of course, to the Progressive doctrine of Diversity.
Diversity, for those who pretend not to know, is perhaps the chief mechanism by which Progressives attempt to control the behavior of the population. 
Recall that the Progressive program is to create the perfect society. The  Progressive elite [...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Abuse of Implantable Defibrillator Guidelines</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/abuse-of-implantable-defibrillator-guidelines#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Jan 2011 15:36:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cardiology Topics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1239</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: Last week the newswires hummed with reports that doctors from all over America are grossly over-utilizing implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), much to the detriment of patients themselves (whose persons are being physically violated by avaricious and/or ignorant physicians), and to the hard-pressed Medicare budget (ICDs being so incredibly expensive). These reports were based on a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>Last week the newswires hummed with reports that doctors from all over America are grossly over-utilizing implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), much to the detriment of patients themselves (whose persons are being physically violated by avaricious and/or ignorant physicians), and to the hard-pressed Medicare budget (ICDs being so incredibly expensive).</p>
<p>These reports were based on a study appearing in the <em>Journal of the American Medical Association</em>, which analyzed data from the National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR) in an attempt to determine the proportion of ICD implants in the US which constitute deviations from government guidelines.<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2011/HEALTH/01/04/defibrillator.implants.study/index.html?hpt=T2" target="_blank"> CNN put it like this</a>: &#8220;Of more than 100,000 people who received ICDs, almost 23% did not need them according to evidence-based guidelines.&#8221; As the lead investigator of the JAMA study told CNN, &#8220;It&#8217;s a lot of people who are getting defibrillators who may not need them.&#8221;</p>
<p>Specifically the new study shows that a full 22.5% of patients receiving ICDs in the US from 2006 to 2009 received them outside of guidelines sanctioned by CMS. Furthermore, patients receiving &#8220;non-evidence-based&#8221; ICDs had a significantly higher rate of in-hospital mortality (0.57% vs 0.18%, p&lt;.001), and of post-procedure complications ((3.23% vs 2.41%; p&lt;0.001). Notably, ICDs implanted by non-electrophysiologists were significantly more likely to be non-evidence-based than ICDs implanted by electrophysiologists (24.8% vs. 20.8%).</p>
<p>The lead author stressed this latter point to <a href="http://www.theheart.org/article/1168527.do" target="_blank">theHeart.org</a>: &#8220;Electrophysiologists — who do these procedures day in and day out and are more likely to be more familiar with the guidelines and the evidence that supports ICD use — were significantly less likely to use these non-evidence-based devices.&#8221; And an accompanying editorial in JAMA, also written by a couple of electrophysiologists, says that the results of this study indicate that the &#8220;intensive training&#8221; which electrophysiologists undergo &#8220;may improve both the preoperative evaluation of patients as well as the operative and immediate postoperative care of patients undergoing ICD implantation.&#8221;</p>
<p>So this study purports to tell us several things: A) Doctors who implant ICDs are surprisingly poor at following clear-cut, evidence-based guidelines; B) As a result, patients are receiving unnecessary medical devices, and suffering unnecessary harm; and C) At least one mitigation for this problem would be to make sure all ICD implantations are conducted by electrophysiologists. Further, ominously implied in some of the news stories regarding this study is the notion that, perhaps, so clear-cut an abuse ought to be looked into by federal prosecutors, similar to cases we have heard of lately involving the abuse of coronary artery stenting.</p>
<p>To all this, DrRich has a few observations:</p>
<p><strong>1) Guidelines are No Longer Guidelines.</strong> &#8220;Guidelines&#8221; implies, literally, a guide, a signpost, a general set of factors that one ought to take into account when making specific decisions regarding specific individual patients. Guidelines are a strong set of recommendations which (all other things being equal) one ought to follow in the majority of cases, and when one chooses not to follow them, one ought to have a good reason for making that choice.</p>
<p>When the use of clinical guidelines is considered in view of this now-quaint notion, one does not expect 100% compliance. After all, patients being patients, they bring to the table lots and lots of special considerations one ought to take into account when deciding how to apply guidelines. Depending on the level of evidence upon which a certain set of guidelines were established, and considering the array of variations on the mean which patients still insist on bringing to a doctor&#8217;s notice, the optimal applicability of a given set of guidelines to a given population of patients ought to look something like a bell-shaped-curve. It is not immediately obvious, for instance, that a rate of compliance with a set of guidelines of 77.5% is simply too low. Indeed, a rate of compliance with your typical clinical guidelines well north of that number might imply, when one fully considers the matter, an abrogation of the physician&#8217;s duty to make informed clinical decisions based on ALL available evidence, including those introduced by an individual patient&#8217;s specific circumstances.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, the very guidelines regarding ICDs which doctors are now accused of abusing admit that “the ultimate judgment regarding care of a particular patient must be made by the physician and the patient in light of all of the circumstances presented by that patient.&#8221;</p>
<p>In this light, a very striking feature of this new report is its baseline assertion that the strict following of guidelines is &#8220;evidence-based&#8221; practice, while any deviation is &#8220;non-evidence-based;&#8221; that is, by implication at least, it is good medicine vs. bad medicine. And so, &#8220;only&#8221; 77.5% of ICD implanters are practicing good medicine, and that is clearly a major concern &#8211; one for which urgent solutions should be sought.</p>
<p>It is one thing for the government to insist that doctors follow their guidelines to the letter, or face fines or worse; it is another for physicians themselves to internalize the same paradigm. Where does that leave patients who are relying on their doctors to use their clinical judgment for their own, individual benefit?</p>
<p>Anyway, guidelines are no longer guidelines; they are directives. Even the doctors agree with this.</p>
<p><strong>2) Most of the Patients Who Received &#8220;Non-Evidence-Based ICDs&#8221; In This Study Actually Were Indicated For ICDs.</strong> News reports of this study, and public pronouncements from the authors themselves, imply that patients in this study who received ICDs outside of the guidelines were getting devices that were unnecessary; that their ICDs, which are deemed &#8220;non-evidence-based ICDs,&#8221; should never have been implanted. This is a misapprehension.</p>
<p>In the large majority of cases, the deviation from the guidelines was simply in the timing of ICD implantation. Patients received their indicated ICDs earlier than the guidelines specify. CMS guidelines say that patients who are indicated for ICDs should not receive them for 40 days after a heart attack, or three months after the diagnosis of heart failure. Most deviations occurred when patients who were supposed to get ICDs got them during the 40-day (or three-month) window.</p>
<p>So the doctors who violated the guidelines were deciding that, for one reason or another, their patients who needed ICDs would be better off receiving their potentially life-saving devices now rather than two or three months from now.</p>
<p>DrRich will leave aside for now the relatively weak evidence upon which CMS based its recommendation to delay ICD implantation following a heart attack or heart failure diagnosis, and simply assert that it is probably the least evidence-based portion of the ICD guidelines, and in fact, the language in the guideline&#8217;s <a href="http://www.cms.gov/mcd/viewdecisionmemo.asp?id=148" target="_blank">supporting documentation</a>, provided by CMS itself, admits to a certain amount of aribitrariness here. (Perhaps DrRich will discuss in detail in a future post the very &#8220;interesting&#8221; process CMS followed in establishing these ICD guidelines in the first place.)</p>
<p>But even if you buy the notion that the delay prescribed by the guidelines is fully legitimate, there are still many good reasons one might choose not to wait. Perhaps the patient also needs a pacemaker, and implanting a pacemaker now, and subsequently removing it and replacing it with an ICD (which also functions as a pacemaker) in less than 40 days makes little sense. Perhaps the patient will soon be losing her health insurance (not an uncommon situation these days). Perhaps there are features suggesting that the heart failure is particularly unlikely to improve during the next 3 months. Perhaps there are features that imply that a patient has a particularly high risk of sudden death in the near term.</p>
<p>Whatever. The point is that this study does not show that 22.5% of ICD implants are unnecessary. It shows that sometimes ICDs which everybody agrees are indicated are being implanted a few weeks earlier than the Central Authority would like. The NCDR database the authors used to determine guideline compliance did not allow them to assess the legitimacy of the doctors&#8217; decisions to implant them earlier than CMS prescribes.</p>
<p>Back in the 1990s, when the enlightened idea of &#8220;medicine by guidelines&#8221; was first being promulgated, it was taken as a basic tenet that, after sufficient training and education had been accomplished regarding a set of guidelines, if deviations from the guidelines still exceeded expectations, then it is necessary to consider that there may be something amiss about the guidelines themselves, and the rationale behind the guidelines ought to be formally revisited. But that was back when guidelines were still guidelines, and not directives.</p>
<p><strong>3) The Important Outcome Is Conspicuously Absent In This Study.</strong> One can surmise that the main reason doctors implanted ICDs earlier than the guidelines recommend, 22.5% of the time, is that they thought their patient might experience sudden death during the waiting period. That is, they wanted to protect their patient from sudden death now, instead of two or three months from now. Maybe they were just being obstinate, or stupid, but that was their rationale.</p>
<p>This being the case, the critical information we would want to know is whether the early implantation of ICDs might have led to an overall difference in survival. But alas, that critical information is also not available in the NCDR database. So we know (because the authors were quick to point out) that patients who received &#8220;non-evidence-based&#8221; ICDs had a worse in-hospital mortality (a difference of roughly 0.4%), and a worse post-procedure complication rate. But what was the difference in survival at, say, one year? Did the early implantation of ICDs increase overall mortality (which is the impression the authors and the newswires leave us with), or did it<em> reduce</em> overall mortality by offering extended protection from sudden death? An overall reduction in mortality was, after all, what the physicians intended when they selected a subset of patients they thought would benefit from not waiting for their ICDs. And it is entirely possible that their decisions did just that.</p>
<p>It seems to DrRich that we might want to know this information, before we castigate too severely (or submit for prosecution) the physicians who judged that &#8220;early&#8221; ICD implantation would be the best approach in a certain proportion of their ICD-indicated patients.</p>
<p><strong>4) Electrophysiologists Can Be As Self-serving As Anyone Else.</strong> This last observation saddens DrRich, himself an exceedingly humble and self-effacing electrophysiologist, as his many thousands of great admirers will attest.</p>
<p>The authors of this study &#8211; and the editorialists who wrote in the same issue of JAMA &#8211; are all among DrRich&#8217;s brethren electrophysiologists. All of them seem to conclude from their analysis that ICDs ought to be implanted by electrophysiologists pretty much exclusively, since we EPs are demonstrated to be (thanks to this study) more likely to follow the guidelines, presumably because we are more &#8220;familiar with the guidelines and the evidence that supports ICD use,&#8221; by virtue of our &#8220;extensive training,&#8221; our vast experience, &amp;c.</p>
<p>But once again, the majority of guideline &#8220;deviations&#8221; which were seen in this study were in the timing of ICD implantation, and not in the fact of ICD implantation. In effect, therefore, the authors are arguing that electrophysiologists are simply better at counting to 40 than those other kinds of doctors. DrRich does not find this a compelling argument for instigating an amendment to the guidelines aimed primarily at protecting the electrophysiologists&#8217; turf.</p>
<p>Furthermore, DrRich suspects that the better compliance with the guidelines evidenced by electrophysiologists has less to do with their superior guideline-following prowess, and more with the fact that there tends to be a built-in delay when EPs implant ICDs. Patients with fresh heart attacks and recent heart failure diagnoses are under the care of non-electrophysiologists (many of whom can implant ICDs themselves, whenever they think they ought to), while patients seen by electrophysiologists generally have to first be referred &#8211; a process that introduces a fortuitous delay, and thus, of better guideline &#8220;compliance.&#8221;</p>
<p>Indeed, when one considers this built-in advantage enjoyed by EPs, one must wonder at the fact that, even for patients implanted by electrophysiologists, nearly 21% still received &#8220;non-evidence-based&#8221; (i.e., &#8220;early&#8221;) ICDs. This value, statistically-speaking, may indeed be significantly less than the overall value of 22.5%. But practically speaking it is pretty much the same rate of non-compliance. Which leaves one wondering: Why are electrophysiologists &#8211; who suggest that they alone ought to be doing these procedures &#8211; themselves so lousy at following the central directives?</p>
<p>Perhaps they, too, need remedial counting lessons. Or perhaps they, with their superior intellect and experience and so forth, actually agree with their non-EP colleagues that delaying ICD implantation in all patients with recent heart attacks and heart failure diagnoses may sometimes (roughly a fifth of the time) be counterproductive.</p>
<p>But no matter. Guidelines are guidelines, which is to say, they&#8217;re directives. Following them to the letter is good. &#8220;Interpreting&#8221; them is bad. It is now apparent that even sophisticated physicians, who should know better, have completely bought in to this new paradigm on guidelines favored by our Central Authorities, and appear less concerned about the implications of this paradigm on their patients and on the practice of medicine, than about how to turn it to their own, narrow advantage.</p>
<p>______</p>
<p><em>DrRich hates to be so darned prescient.  On January 19, it was revealed that the Department of Justice has launched an investigation regarding ICD implants, as related to &#8220;proper guidelines for clinical decision making.&#8221;  DrRich tells electrophysiologists, and other ICD implanters, <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/what-should-electrophysiologists-make-of-the-doj-investigation" target="_blank">what to make of this rather scary prospect, here</a>.<br />
</em></p>
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		<slash:comments>12</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1239/0/Abusing-ICD-Guidelines.mp3" length="17233711" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:17:57</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

Last week the newswires hummed with reports that doctors from all over America are grossly over-utilizing implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), much to the detriment of patients themselves (whose persons are being physically viol[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

Last week the newswires hummed with reports that doctors from all over America are grossly over-utilizing implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), much to the detriment of patients themselves (whose persons are being physically violated by avaricious and/or ignorant physicians), and to the hard-pressed Medicare budget (ICDs being so incredibly expensive).
These reports were based on a study appearing in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which analyzed data from the National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR) in an attempt to determine the proportion of ICD implants in the US which constitute deviations from government guidelines. CNN put it like this: &#8220;Of more than 100,000 people who received ICDs, almost 23% did not need them according to evidence-based guidelines.&#8221; As the lead investigator of the JAMA study told CNN, &#8220;It&#8217;s a lot of people who are getting defibrillators who may not need them.&#8221;
Specifically the new study shows that a full 22.5% of patients receiving ICDs in the US from 2006 to 2009 received them outside of guidelines sanctioned by CMS. Furthermore, patients receiving &#8220;non-evidence-based&#8221; ICDs had a significantly higher rate of in-hospital mortality (0.57% vs 0.18%, p&#60;.001), and of post-procedure complications ((3.23% vs 2.41%; p&#60;0.001). Notably, ICDs implanted by non-electrophysiologists were significantly more likely to be non-evidence-based than ICDs implanted by electrophysiologists (24.8% vs. 20.8%).
The lead author stressed this latter point to theHeart.org: &#8220;Electrophysiologists — who do these procedures day in and day out and are more likely to be more familiar with the guidelines and the evidence that supports ICD use — were significantly less likely to use these non-evidence-based devices.&#8221; And an accompanying editorial in JAMA, also written by a couple of electrophysiologists, says that the results of this study indicate that the &#8220;intensive training&#8221; which electrophysiologists undergo &#8220;may improve both the preoperative evaluation of patients as well as the operative and immediate postoperative care of patients undergoing ICD implantation.&#8221;
So this study purports to tell us several things: A) Doctors who implant ICDs are surprisingly poor at following clear-cut, evidence-based guidelines; B) As a result, patients are receiving unnecessary medical devices, and suffering unnecessary harm; and C) At least one mitigation for this problem would be to make sure all ICD implantations are conducted by electrophysiologists. Further, ominously implied in some of the news stories regarding this study is the notion that, perhaps, so clear-cut an abuse ought to be looked into by federal prosecutors, similar to cases we have heard of lately involving the abuse of coronary artery stenting.
To all this, DrRich has a few observations:
1) Guidelines are No Longer Guidelines. &#8220;Guidelines&#8221; implies, literally, a guide, a signpost, a general set of factors that one ought to take into account when making specific decisions regarding specific individual patients. Guidelines are a strong set of recommendations which (all other things being equal) one ought to follow in the majority of cases, and when one chooses not to follow them, one ought to have a good reason for making that choice.
When the use of clinical guidelines is considered in view of this now-quaint notion, one does not expect 100% compliance. After all, patients being patients, they bring to the table lots and lots of special considerations one ought to take into account when deciding how to apply guidelines. Depending on the level of evidence upon which a certain set of guidelines were established, and considering the array of variations on the mean which patients still insist on bringing to a doctor&#8217;s notice, the optimal applicability of a given set of guidelines to a given population of patients ought to look something [...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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		<item>
		<title>Patients, Doctors and Remote Third Parties</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/patients-doctors-and-remote-third-parties</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/patients-doctors-and-remote-third-parties#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Dec 2010 20:02:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General rationing issues]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1196</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: From the ominously-titled book, &#8220;New Rules,&#8221; by Donald Berwick MD and Troyen Brennan MD: “Today, this isolated relationship [between doctor and patient] is no longer tenable or possible. . . Traditional medical ethics, based on the doctor-patient dyad, must be reformulated to fit the new mold of the delivery of health care. . . [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>From the ominously-titled book, &#8220;<em>New Rules</em>,&#8221; by Donald Berwick MD and Troyen Brennan MD:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>“Today, this isolated relationship [between doctor and patient] is no longer tenable or possible. . . Traditional medical ethics, based on the doctor-patient dyad, must be reformulated to fit the new mold of the delivery of health care. . . The primary function of regulation in health care&#8230;is to constrain decentralized individualized decision making.”</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Unfortunately, Dr. Berwick&#8217;s straightforward formulation of the appropriate role of the individual physician in our reformed healthcare system is not isolated to thinkers of the Progressive persuasion. The notion that most clinical decisions can be usefully made by a centralized authority is attractive even to some conservatives.</p>
<p>For example, a few years ago the noted economist Arnold Kling <a href="http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2007/12/against_moneyba.html" target="_blank">strongly defended the idea</a>. &#8220;My own view is that a remote third party probably can use statistical evidence to make good recommendations for a course of treatment.&#8221;</p>
<p>Now, Kling is no far-left radical, pushing for centralized control of healthcare (and everything else). Indeed, he is now with the Cato Institute, and before that he taught economics at George Mason University. So he has earned his conservative and/or libertarian chops.</p>
<p>And to be fair, he is not really calling here for &#8220;remote third parties&#8221; to have final authority on what&#8217;s best for individual patients.  Rather, he thinks patients should make that decision for themselves, weighing the recommendations of data-driven guidelines promulgated by remote experts, against the ego-toss&#8217;d recommendations from their all-too-fallible doctors, or, as Kling sarcastically refers to them, their &#8220;heroic personal saviors.&#8221; (Such sarcasm, regular readers will know, is as abhorrent to DrRich as it probably is to you.)  Kling is saying: trust patients, armed with good evidence-based recommendations handed down from experts, to make the right decisions for themselves.</p>
<p>In concept even DrRich supports this latter notion. Indeed, a chief theme of this blog has been that doctors have been coerced into such a compromised position by the government and the insurance carriers that wise patients will no longer simply trust their doctors&#8217; advice explicitly. As things now stand, patients who place full reliance on their doctors, assuming that they&#8217;ll get all the information they need to make good medical decisions, are putting themselves in peril. Smart patients will seek out all the information they can about their own medical conditions, so they can confirm that their doctors are indeed presenting them with all their reasonable options, and so they can more intelligently evaluate those options. And certainly, expert-endorsed guidelines would be an important part of that research.</p>
<p>But Kling&#8217;s remedy &#8211; that patients rely on the treatment recommendations made by expert panels as a remedy to the conflicted advice being doled out by their own doctors &#8211; is seriously flawed.</p>
<p>The first flaw, of course, is the idea that remote third parties, wielding evidence-based data, can make good treatment recommendations for individual patients. Evidence-based guidelines, almost by definition, are designed to improve the average outcome across a population of individuals, and are specifically designed <em>not</em> to optimize outcomes for each individual within that population.</p>
<p>Second, Kling apparently assumes that the remote third parties who are producing evidence-based treatment recommendations will be acting in a completely objective and unbiased manner. But this can never be the case. A major theme of the Covert Rationing Blog this past year has been to demonstrate that a) clinical science is probably the least exact of the sciences; b)<a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-reform/the-inevitability-of-bias-in-clinical-research" target="_blank"> the design and interpretation of clinical studies is inevitably attended by significant bias</a>; and c) therefore, no matter who is producing them &#8211; whether it is <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/the-proper-syntax-for-the-god-panelists" target="_blank">medical professionals</a> or <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/how-cardiologists-will-manage-the-god-panelists" target="_blank">GOD panelists</a> (Government Operatives Deliberating) &#8211; these guidelines will always be produced with a particular agenda in mind. To assume that such agendas will be primarily &#8211; or even remotely &#8211; related to optimizing the outcomes of individual patients will often be a serious error.</p>
<p>Third, the idea that patients, even very intelligent patients armed with &#8220;perfect information,&#8221; can by themselves reliably sort through the morass of conflicting evidence and conflicting opinions that invariably inform any set of clinical recommendations (whether made by vaunted teams of completely objective experts from on-high, or by one&#8217;s inherently flawed, conflicted and ego-driven personal physician) is simply false. This would be the case even if the healthcare system were perfectly aligned to help patients. Which, of course, it is not. (It is aligned to affect the covert rationing of healthcare.)</p>
<p>Finally, while the advice patients get from their doctors is indeed biased, more and more it is biased (thanks to heavy-handed coercion) in favor of those same central authorities that are commissioning the expert panels.</p>
<p>As a result, patients &#8211; especially when they are sick and least able to fend for themselves &#8211; are generally incapable of negotiating the gratuitous complexities and hidden hazards laid out before them by a hostile healthcare system, a system which silently prays they will, in frustration, just go buy themselves some alternative medicine remedy, then crawl under a bush and die while contemplating their qi. Indeed, patients are as incapable of successfully navigating such a system as are accused felons of navigating a complex and hostile legal system that&#8217;s bent on sending them away for 15-20 years.</p>
<p>It is for this very reason that accused felons are assigned an advocate, an individual who is ethically and legally obligated to take their part, to help them navigate all the legal hazards, to do everything possible to see they are treated fairly, and that they are given every reasonable chance to prove their innocence. Lawyers, as much as we physicians might like to castigate them, are absolutely critical to a civil society.</p>
<p>And this is the reason why patients (according to traditional, though <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/drrich-the-acp-and-medical-ethics" target="_blank">now quaint</a>, medical ethics) are also supposed to have a personal advocate, an individual who is obligated to take their part, to help them navigate all the medical hazards, to do everything possible to see that they are treated fairly and that all available medical options are made open to them, and that they are given every reasonable chance of a good clinical outcome. Patients, in other words, need doctors who are devoted to the classic precepts of their profession. Such doctors, as much as Kling and others might like to diminish their importance, are also absolutely critical to a civil society.</p>
<p>But, as we have seen, and as has been publicly celebrated by Dr. Berwick and others, severing the classic doctor-patient relationship has been Job One under our system of covert rationing &#8211; whether that rationing is managed by insurance companies or by the government.  Doctors simply cannot be allowed any longer to place their patients first. They&#8217;ve got to place the needs of their true masters first. They&#8217;ve got to keep the government and the insurers happy or they&#8217;re out of a job. They are no longer permitted to tailor clinical choices to best fit their individual patients, but they are simply to apply treatment directives as they are handed down by (from now on, government-appointed) panels of experts.</p>
<p>And this brings us back to Kling.  DrRich of course agrees with his notion that patients ought to be armed with the high-quality information they need to determine their own medical destiny. DrRich can even agree that relying solely on the information provided by today&#8217;s doctor is generally not advisable. But DrRich cannot agree with the reason it&#8217;s not advisable. Doctors aren&#8217;t so much inherently flawed by ego and other intrinsic character flaws (at least, no more than any other group of humans), as they are operating under duress, under imposed constraints, and under external coercions that systematically and purposefully prevent them from discharging their professional obligations.</p>
<p>Nor can DrRich agree with Kling&#8217;s proposed solution. No centralized set of recommendations, evidence-based or not, can fix this problem for patients &#8211; especially when the expert bodies that make those recommendations are controlled by the same entities that have, with malice aforethought, killed the medical profession for the express purpose of stripping patients of their advocates, and therefore, of their medical options.</p>
<p>DrRich has trouble seeing a solution to this problem that is not radical. He does not see how doctors can resume their rightful place as their patients&#8217; advocates and remain in what has become of the traditional healthcare system. Perhaps enough doctors to make a difference will leave the traditional healthcare system, shedding themselves of the third parties who now control their behavior, and re-establishing their practices (and revitalizing their profession) with a new commitment to the doctor-patient relationship. If not, then perhaps some brand new profession will establish itself (call it &#8220;personal healthcare advocates&#8221;) to fill the great void that threatens the safety of every American patient.</p>
<p>So yes, let individual patients weigh all the evidence and choose the healthcare option that suits them best. But unless they have a personal advocate to help them navigate the morass of biased choices &#8211; whether that advocate is their PCP like it&#8217;s supposed to be, or some new variety of professional advocate &#8211; those options will be limited to whatever healthcare is deemed best by the central planners.</p>
<p>A fine economist such as Dr. Kling should realize that a remote third party can no more make good recommendations for individual patients trying to survive in the rough and tumble of the healthcare system, than can a remote third party make good recommendations for individual businesses trying to compete in the rough and tumble of the marketplace. It is one thing for Progressives to hold to such a notion. It is far more disturbing to see respected conservative thinkers doing so.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/patients-doctors-and-remote-third-parties/feed</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
			<enclosure url="http://covertrationingblog.com/podpress_trac/feed/1196/0/patients-doctors-remote-third-parties.mp3" length="12213185" type="audio/mpeg" />
		<itunes:duration>0:12:43</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

From the ominously-titled book, &#8220;New Rules,&#8221; by Donald Berwick MD and Troyen Brennan MD:
“Today, this isolated relationship [between doctor and patient] is no longer tenable or possible. . . Traditional medical ethics, based on[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

From the ominously-titled book, &#8220;New Rules,&#8221; by Donald Berwick MD and Troyen Brennan MD:
“Today, this isolated relationship [between doctor and patient] is no longer tenable or possible. . . Traditional medical ethics, based on the doctor-patient dyad, must be reformulated to fit the new mold of the delivery of health care. . . The primary function of regulation in health care&#8230;is to constrain decentralized individualized decision making.”
Unfortunately, Dr. Berwick&#8217;s straightforward formulation of the appropriate role of the individual physician in our reformed healthcare system is not isolated to thinkers of the Progressive persuasion. The notion that most clinical decisions can be usefully made by a centralized authority is attractive even to some conservatives.
For example, a few years ago the noted economist Arnold Kling strongly defended the idea. &#8220;My own view is that a remote third party probably can use statistical evidence to make good recommendations for a course of treatment.&#8221;
Now, Kling is no far-left radical, pushing for centralized control of healthcare (and everything else). Indeed, he is now with the Cato Institute, and before that he taught economics at George Mason University. So he has earned his conservative and/or libertarian chops.
And to be fair, he is not really calling here for &#8220;remote third parties&#8221; to have final authority on what&#8217;s best for individual patients.  Rather, he thinks patients should make that decision for themselves, weighing the recommendations of data-driven guidelines promulgated by remote experts, against the ego-toss&#8217;d recommendations from their all-too-fallible doctors, or, as Kling sarcastically refers to them, their &#8220;heroic personal saviors.&#8221; (Such sarcasm, regular readers will know, is as abhorrent to DrRich as it probably is to you.)  Kling is saying: trust patients, armed with good evidence-based recommendations handed down from experts, to make the right decisions for themselves.
In concept even DrRich supports this latter notion. Indeed, a chief theme of this blog has been that doctors have been coerced into such a compromised position by the government and the insurance carriers that wise patients will no longer simply trust their doctors&#8217; advice explicitly. As things now stand, patients who place full reliance on their doctors, assuming that they&#8217;ll get all the information they need to make good medical decisions, are putting themselves in peril. Smart patients will seek out all the information they can about their own medical conditions, so they can confirm that their doctors are indeed presenting them with all their reasonable options, and so they can more intelligently evaluate those options. And certainly, expert-endorsed guidelines would be an important part of that research.
But Kling&#8217;s remedy &#8211; that patients rely on the treatment recommendations made by expert panels as a remedy to the conflicted advice being doled out by their own doctors &#8211; is seriously flawed.
The first flaw, of course, is the idea that remote third parties, wielding evidence-based data, can make good treatment recommendations for individual patients. Evidence-based guidelines, almost by definition, are designed to improve the average outcome across a population of individuals, and are specifically designed not to optimize outcomes for each individual within that population.
Second, Kling apparently assumes that the remote third parties who are producing evidence-based treatment recommendations will be acting in a completely objective and unbiased manner. But this can never be the case. A major theme of the Covert Rationing Blog this past year has been to demonstrate that a) clinical science is probably the least exact of the sciences; b) the design and interpretation of clinical studies is inevitably attended by significant bias; and c) therefore, no matter who is producing them [...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>How Will Progressives Ration Healthcare?</title>
		<link>http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/how-will-progressives-ration-healthcare</link>
		<comments>http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/how-will-progressives-ration-healthcare#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Oct 2010 11:46:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>DrRich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General rationing issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Medical ethics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://covertrationingblog.com/?p=1032</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Podcast: In prior posts DrRich introduced his readers to Ezekiel Emanuel, MD, PhD, brother of Rahm, eminent medical ethicist, and one of the White House&#8217;s chief advisers on healthcare policy. Dr. Emanuel was one of the authors of that recent paper in the Annals of Internal Medicine which admonished American physicians that resistance is futile. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Podcast:</strong></p>
<p></p>
<p>In prior posts DrRich introduced his readers to Ezekiel Emanuel, MD, PhD, brother of Rahm, eminent medical ethicist, and one of the White House&#8217;s chief advisers on healthcare policy.  Dr. Emanuel was one of the authors of that recent paper in the <em>Annals of Internal Medicine</em> which admonished American physicians that <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/healthcare-reform/pcps-we-are-the-borg-prepare-to-be-assimilated" target="_blank">resistance is futile</a>. He has also famously called upon American physicians to <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/medical-ethics/the-dire-implications-for-doctors-of-the-new-medical-ethics" target="_blank">abandon the obsolete medical ethics </a>expressed in the Hippocratic Oath.</p>
<p>The reason the ideas (and pronouncements) of Dr. Emanuel are important is that he presumably will be a major &#8220;decider&#8221; in determining who will serve on the <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/cardiology-topics/how-cardiologists-will-manage-the-god-panelists" target="_blank">GOD panels</a>, and how those panels will operate to advance his (and Mr. Obama&#8217;s) program of healthcare reform.</p>
<p>So, before we leave Dr. Emanuel to his important duties, let us take one more pass at the views he has expressed, regarding the direction of American healthcare, which we can expect to see manifested in government guidelines and policies in the coming years.</p>
<p>In particular, and especially relevant to the subject of this blog, let us view how Dr. Emanuel would direct the rationing of our healthcare.</p>
<p>His ideas in this regard were probably spelled out most clearly in an article Dr. Emanuel co-authored in <em>The Lancet</em>, in January, 2009, which proposed a system of healthcare rationing based on what he and co-authors call the &#8220;complete lives system.&#8221; Most notably, the complete lives system proposes rationing healthcare on the basis of age, in a way that frankly &#8220;discriminates against older people&#8221; (<em>The Lancet</em>, Vol 373, p 429).</p>
<p>While Emanuel has taken a lot of heat from the right wing for espousing such a thing, his argument for doing so is unique and thoughtful, and DrRich finds it worthy of more careful consideration.</p>
<p>First, we should note that the outrage we often hear expressed at the very idea of healthcare rationing (with each side accusing the other of wanting to ration) only applies to politicians. When healthcare ethicists get together for instance, they (like DrRich) understand that healthcare rationing is utterly unavoidable, and that in fact we&#8217;re already not avoiding it. Ethicists argue, instead, about how to do it. In this way, DrRich feels a certain sense of brotherhood with these ethicists (a group which, in nearly every other way, DrRich most often feels a sense of disgust).</p>
<p>So let us consider the ethical argument most often made for discriminating against the elderly in a system of healthcare rationing. Almost always, the argument is a utilitarian one. Saving the life of a 90-year-old might &#8220;buy&#8221; him only an extra two or three years of life, whereas spending the same amount of money to save a 10-year-old might buy him another 70 &#8211; 80 years of life. So society gains much more if it spends the money on the younger person, and withholds it from the older one. From a utilitarian viewpoint the argument for discriminating against the elderly is unassailable.</p>
<p>Non-utilitarian ethics asserts that all individuals have equal value, so discriminating against any person should be avoided, and therefore the 10-year-old and the 90-year-old should have an equal opportunity to receive the medical service in question. (That is, either both should get it or neither should get it.)</p>
<p>DrRich believes that most people would sympathize with the idea that if only one life can be saved, saving a young person&#8217;s life might make more sense than saving a very old person&#8217;s life. He thinks that even most 90-year-olds he has known would agree with this proposition. The problem, DrRich believes, is with the rationale we use for making such a decision.</p>
<p>The utilitarian argument for discriminating against the elderly in a rationing system rests on the idea (as does all utilitarian ethical reasoning) that individuals are not of equal value, at least, not from society&#8217;s point of view. And since they are not equivalent in value, it is right and proper for some agent of society to determine the relative value of individuals, so that resources can be distributed accordingly.</p>
<p>Obviously, utilitarian ethics opens the door for differentiating the intrinsic values of individuals for reasons other than age. That is, if you can devalue the elderly to optimize the public good, then you can also devalue the disabled, the stupid, the  lazy, the left-handed, and the obese (for instance) to optimize public good.</p>
<p>Emanuel&#8217;s &#8220;complete lives system,&#8221; he argues, is NOT a utilitarian one. Emanuel would favor treating the 10-year-old over the 90-year-old not to maximize public good, but to maximize the opportunity of individuals to enjoy &#8220;complete lives&#8221; over the entire age spectrum. That is, under his system all individuals are taken as having equal intrinsic value. And during the course of their lives, everyone experiences an equal spectrum of priorities &#8211; first, the priority of a 10-year-old, and later (if lucky enough to live that long) the priority of a 90-year-old. While in practical terms this still means discriminating against the elderly, it does so in a way that cannot be extended to other groups of people (i.e, the disabled and so forth), and that, in fact, yields equal age-based priorities across individuals through the course of their complete lives. In other words, when one considers the entire course of an individual&#8217;s complete life, he or she is treated the same as any other individual during the entire course of their lives.</p>
<p>In this way, Emanuel asserts, the complete lives system is not a utilitarian system; while it would allow us to withhold medical care from the elderly, based on their age, it would do so in a way that would not open the door for discriminating against others, for other reasons.</p>
<p>DrRich understands this reasoning because he proposed something entirely similar <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Fixing-American-Healthcare-Unification-ebook/dp/B003U2RVU2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;m=AG56TWVU5XWC2&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1278431931&amp;sr=1-1" target="_blank">in his book</a>, as an option for dealing with the age issue in a rationing system. In fact, since DrRich wrote his book a few years before Emanuel published his &#8220;complete lives system,&#8221; it is entirely possible that Emanuel got his idea from yours truly.</p>
<p>DrRich does not expect any thanks from Dr. Emanuel in this regard, however, and in fact he wishes to thank Dr. Emanuel for showing him the fatal flaw in such thinking. Indeed, thanks to Dr. Emanuel, if DrRich were to produce a new edition of his book, he would propose no such thing.</p>
<p>For, no sooner does Dr. Emanuel propose his complete lives system as an alternative to utilitarian ethical reasoning, than he demonstrates, in the very same article, how easily his system can be twisted to the ends of utilitarian ethics.</p>
<p>Specifically, Emanuel argues that a healthcare rationing system should also discriminate <em>against the very young</em>, and asserts that his &#8220;complete lives system&#8221; justifies such discrimination (since every individual, at one time in their lives, is very young). But in explaining why it would be desirable to withhold medical services from the very young, Emanuel reveals that his rationale, in fact, is entirely utilitarian:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Consideration of the importance of complete lives also supports modifying the youngest-first principle by prioritizing adolescents and young adults over infants (figure). Adolescents have received substantial education and parental care, investments that will be wasted without a complete life. Infants, in contrast, have not yet received these investments.&#8221; (<em>The Lancet</em>, vol 373, p. 428)</p></blockquote>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-789" title="livessaved" src="http://covertrationingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/livessaved.jpg" alt="livessaved" />So, Emanuel holds that it is OK to discriminate against infants, toddlers and young children on the grounds that society has not &#8220;invested&#8221; a lot of resources in them yet. That is, their worth to society is not all that great.</p>
<p>This provision is extremely disturbing, to DrRich at least. For it essentially discards the notion that all human lives are of equal intrinsic value, in favor of the idea that an individual&#8217;s real value ought to be determined by their worthiness to the collective.  And so society has the right and the duty to determine which individual lives are valuable enough to save, and which are not. Note that the rationale for discriminating against the elderly in the complete lives system was framed specifically to avoid having to do this.</p>
<p>In DrRich&#8217;s view, this provision against the young entirely negates the purported ethical premise of &#8220;complete lives.&#8221; This provision is what finally places the state, the insurers, or the GOD panels in the position of assigning intrinsic value to individual human lives, from a distance, as a matter of policy. If this can be done based on extreme youth, then it can also be done based on any other factor which some empowered panel decides will influence the worth of individuals to society.</p>
<p>The above figure, from Emanuel&#8217;s article on the complete lives system, reduces the question to a stark graph, with age on the X axis and value to society on the Y axis. Your age is determined by God. Your value to society is determined by the state.</p>
<p>It is easy to envision other, similar graphs, with your worthiness to society plotted on the Y axis, and certain personal features other than age plotted on they X axis &#8211; your income, your IQ, your disabilities, your BMI, etc.</p>
<p>DrRich <a href="http://covertrationingblog.com/general-rationing-issues/drrichs-theory-of-progressive-thought" target="_blank">reminds his readers</a> that eugenics has been, from the beginning, an intrinsic part of the Progressive program. The idea that society can (and must) be perfected hinges, to a large extent, on the idea that mankind can (and must) be perfected. And perfecting mankind will require at least some culling of the herd. Indeed, early Progressives unabashedly embraced eugenics as an essential feature of societal perfection &#8211; and said so. Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Bertrand Russell, H. G. Wells, and Margaret Sanger are only the most well-known of the Progressives who openly extolled eugenics.</p>
<p>Openly espousing eugenics became politically inadvisable after the Nazi atrocities came to light. But, since you can never achieve a perfect society while you are &#8220;carrying&#8221; a large proportion of people who are defective in their bodies, or minds, or thoughts, finding an acceptable way to eliminate such undesirables remains intrinsic to Progressivism.</p>
<p>DrRich believes that gaining control of the healthcare system, and gaining control of who gets what, when and how, provides both a new venue and a new language for Progressives to bring their program to fruition.</p>
<p>He humbly suggests that Dr. Emanuel&#8217;s &#8220;complete lives system&#8221; is an example of this new language, and that it offers a glimpse of what a system of Progressive healthcare rationing will look like.</p>
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		<itunes:duration>0:13:55</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>Podcast:

In prior posts DrRich introduced his readers to Ezekiel Emanuel, MD, PhD, brother of Rahm, eminent medical ethicist, and one of the White House&#8217;s chief advisers on healthcare policy.  Dr. Emanuel was one of the authors of that recent[...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>Podcast:

In prior posts DrRich introduced his readers to Ezekiel Emanuel, MD, PhD, brother of Rahm, eminent medical ethicist, and one of the White House&#8217;s chief advisers on healthcare policy.  Dr. Emanuel was one of the authors of that recent paper in the Annals of Internal Medicine which admonished American physicians that resistance is futile. He has also famously called upon American physicians to abandon the obsolete medical ethics expressed in the Hippocratic Oath.
The reason the ideas (and pronouncements) of Dr. Emanuel are important is that he presumably will be a major &#8220;decider&#8221; in determining who will serve on the GOD panels, and how those panels will operate to advance his (and Mr. Obama&#8217;s) program of healthcare reform.
So, before we leave Dr. Emanuel to his important duties, let us take one more pass at the views he has expressed, regarding the direction of American healthcare, which we can expect to see manifested in government guidelines and policies in the coming years.
In particular, and especially relevant to the subject of this blog, let us view how Dr. Emanuel would direct the rationing of our healthcare.
His ideas in this regard were probably spelled out most clearly in an article Dr. Emanuel co-authored in The Lancet, in January, 2009, which proposed a system of healthcare rationing based on what he and co-authors call the &#8220;complete lives system.&#8221; Most notably, the complete lives system proposes rationing healthcare on the basis of age, in a way that frankly &#8220;discriminates against older people&#8221; (The Lancet, Vol 373, p 429).
While Emanuel has taken a lot of heat from the right wing for espousing such a thing, his argument for doing so is unique and thoughtful, and DrRich finds it worthy of more careful consideration.
First, we should note that the outrage we often hear expressed at the very idea of healthcare rationing (with each side accusing the other of wanting to ration) only applies to politicians. When healthcare ethicists get together for instance, they (like DrRich) understand that healthcare rationing is utterly unavoidable, and that in fact we&#8217;re already not avoiding it. Ethicists argue, instead, about how to do it. In this way, DrRich feels a certain sense of brotherhood with these ethicists (a group which, in nearly every other way, DrRich most often feels a sense of disgust).
So let us consider the ethical argument most often made for discriminating against the elderly in a system of healthcare rationing. Almost always, the argument is a utilitarian one. Saving the life of a 90-year-old might &#8220;buy&#8221; him only an extra two or three years of life, whereas spending the same amount of money to save a 10-year-old might buy him another 70 &#8211; 80 years of life. So society gains much more if it spends the money on the younger person, and withholds it from the older one. From a utilitarian viewpoint the argument for discriminating against the elderly is unassailable.
Non-utilitarian ethics asserts that all individuals have equal value, so discriminating against any person should be avoided, and therefore the 10-year-old and the 90-year-old should have an equal opportunity to receive the medical service in question. (That is, either both should get it or neither should get it.)
DrRich believes that most people would sympathize with the idea that if only one life can be saved, saving a young person&#8217;s life might make more sense than saving a very old person&#8217;s life. He thinks that even most 90-year-olds he has known would agree with this proposition. The problem, DrRich believes, is with the rationale we use for making such a decision.
The utilitarian argument for discriminating against the elderly in a rationing system rests on the idea (as does all utilitarian ethical reasoning) that individuals are not of equal value, at least, not from society&#8217;s point of view. And since they are not equivalent in value, it is righ[...]</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:author>Richard N. Fogoros</itunes:author>
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